18 Kan. 508 | Kan. | 1877
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Upon the trial plaintiffs proved a chain of title from the government, and rested. Then, as the record recites, the defendants put Solomon Smith, one of the plaintiffs below, on the stand as a witness, and after some preliminary questions, asked the following question: “State whether or not, you ever made any agreement with Noah M. Blankenship for the sale of the lands now in controversy ? ” To this question the plaintiffs below objected, on the grounds that the same is irrelevant, incompetent, and not the best evidence under the statutes of frauds and perjuries. Upon this question there was no ruling of the court, or exception, until after the offer of proof. The defendants below then made the following offer of testimony:
“ The defendants now offer to show and prove by Solomon Smith, the witness now on the stand, that sometime in August 1871, the plaintiffs, Solomon Smith, and Julia Smith, his then wife, by a verbal agreement with Noah M. Blankenship, sold the lands in controversy to said Blankenship; that said agreement was as follows: Noah M. Blankenship was to give Solomon Smith a warranty deed to 286f acres of land in Pulaski county, Kentucky, (describing it as the 286| acres of land mentioned in defendants’ second defense is described,) and said Blankenship was also to give said Solomon Smith a quitclaim deed to 200 acres of land in Pulaski county, Kentucky, (describing it as the 200 acres of land is described in defendants’ second defense,) and said Blankenship was also to assign to said Solomon Smith a judgment in the circuit court of Pulaski county, Kentucky, (describing it as the judgment in the defendants’ second defense is described,) and that was all that said Blankenship was to give said, plaintiff for said land in controversy; and that in consideration of said Blankenship’s performing said several acts on his part, the*514 said plaintiffs orally agreed to execute to said Blankenship a warranty deed to the land in controversy. That after the said agreement between the said plaintiffs and said Blankenship was made, and while the plaintiffs were still in possession of the said lands in controversy, said Solomon Smith was informed by defendants, W. M. Wicks and Harrison Mays, that they had bought the land in controversy of said Blankenship, and that the said plaintiffs, with the intention of carrying out their said agreement with Blankenship, and the agreement they had been informed had been made between said Blankenship and the defendants for the sale of said lands, moved off the said lands in controversy, and delivered up to said defendants the key to the house on the said lands,- the house in which, up to that time, they had been living, for the purpose of said defendants taking possession of said lands.”
Without pursuing this digression any further, and returning to the case before us, it seems to us that the ruling of the court cannot be sustained; that the testimony offered was relevant and pertinent, and should have been received. For this error the judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.