Court Opinion

ID: 6410315
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:52:11.765448+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:21.056060
License: Public Domain

Thomas, J.
It is important to observe at what stage of the cause, and for what purpose, the evidence was offered. The taking of the oxen from the possession of the plaintiff, on the *549day alleged in the declaration, had been proved. The defendant must therefore rely upon the strength of his own title. He undertook to prove a sale to himself from Jesse Hall; to do this, he proved a negotiation between himself and Hall, in the latter part of April 1850, in which Hall offered to sell the oxen for $100, and the defendant offered to give $95. At this stage in the conversation, no bargain having been made, the witness left. That is, the witness failed to prove any sale. The defendant then offered to show, by the same witness, that about the first of May 1850, the witness had a conversation with Hall, and that Hall then told the witness, that at the time of the previous negotiation in April he sold the oxen to the defendant, and then requested the witness to keep the oxen for him. In other words, the defendant offered to prove a sale to himself by the declaration or admission of the vendor in the country, the vendor then living and a competent witness.
It is not offered to throw a cloud upon the title of the plaintiff, but to establish a title by purchase in the defendant, and it was as evidence offered for this purpose that it was excluded. It was but hearsay evidence, and as such inadmissible, unless it can be clearly shown to be within some of the well known exceptions to the rule which excludes that species of testimony. The rule is founded in obvious wisdom, and upon elementary principles. The exceptions have grown out of the exigencies of particular cases, and are not to be multiplied or extended. There is, indeed, little occasion for this under the statute rule, by which the objection to the competency of the witness by reason of interest is removed. Sts. 1851, c. 233, § 97; 1852, c. 312, § 60.
In the case at bar, Hall was a perfectly competent witness, and knew and could state whether, in AprL 1850, he made a sale to the defendant. And the plaintiff was entitled to the best evidence which the case afforded, the testimony of Hall under oath, and- with the opportunity of cross examination, as to the time when, and the terms upon which such sale, if any, was made to the defendant, unless under some well established exception to the general rule, Hall’s declarations in the country were competent evidence ; and we know of no such exception.
*550It is said by the learned counsel of the defendant, that the plaintiff derives his title from Hall, and stands in his place, and that Hall’s declarations, made before the sale, to the plaintiff, are admissible to show a prior sale to the defendant. It is true the plaintiff derives his title from Hall, and must take it subject to all liens existing when he purchased; but it by no means follows, that having shown, by legal proofs, a sale and delivery of the oxen by Hall to himself, and possession under such sale, the defendant can establish a prior sale to himself by declarations of the vendor in the country. Nor does a purchaser of a chattel stand simply in the light of an assignee of a chattel or chose in action, who succeeds only to the title as it stood at the time of the transfer, qualified, it may be, by any previous admissions of the assignor in disparagement of his title. That rule extends only to cases where the assignee is the legal representative of the assignor, or has acquired title with actual notice of the state of the title of the assignor, as qualified by such admissions, or where, perhaps, he had purchased under such circumstances of suspicion as would be equivalent to actual notice. The purchaser for a good consideration, and without notice, stands rather in the light of the indorsee of a promissory note negotiated before its maturity, and to him may be applied the remark of Parke, J. in Woolway v. Rowe, 1 Ad. & El. 116: “ The right of a person holding by a good title is not to be cut down by the acknowledgment of a former holder that he had no title.” We think that it is equally clear upon the authorities that the declarations of the vendor were inadmissible to prove a sale to the defendant. Bartlet v. Delprat, 4 Mass. 702. Clarke v. Waite, 12 Mass. 439. Baker v. Briggs, 8 Pick. 122. Lyman v. Gipson, 18 Pick. 422. Thomas v. Waterman, 7 Met. 227. Pocock v. Billing, 2 Bing. 269, and 9 Moore, 499. Barough v. White, 4 B. & C. 325, and 6 Dowl. & Ryl. 379. Ross v. Knight, 4 N. H. 236. Hurd v. West, 7 Cow. 752. Whitaker v. Brown, 8 Wend. 490. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 190.
The case of Brattle Square Church v. Bullard, 2 Met. 363, cited by the plaintiff, by no means sustains the admissibility of the evidence offered of the admission of tjie sale by Hall. The *551title of Samuel Spear to the pew, which was the subject of controversy in that case, was sought to be established by an adverse exclusive possession of more than twenty years, on the part of Spear, and those claiming under him. That Spear used the pew was proved; but it was contended that as Mrs. Dunbar, who was the owner of the pew before Spear, was a near relative and lived in his family, his occupation was permissive and not adverse. In this posture of the case, the declarations of Mrs. Dunbar, then deceased, that she had sold the pew to Spear, were admitted not as evidence of a sale, for the court negatived such inference, but as evidence that the actual possession of Spear was adverse and under a claim of title. It will be observed that the declarations admitted were those of a deceased owner, and not of one who was herself a competent witness.
The defendant also contended that the declarations of Hall to Howd in May were connected with, and explanatory of the previous negotiation in April, and were a part of it. The doctrine of the res gestee has been a convenient shelter for many legal anomalies, but is hardly broad enough to cover this. All we legally know of the transaction in April is, that the parties were negotiating. That the negotiation ripened into a bargain was not proved. What Hall stated to the witness in May was a narrative of what took place in April, when the witness was not present. The declarations in May are the sole evidence of the only material fact, that there was a sale. They were not declarations contemporaneous with the thing done and qualifying and giving character to it. They were only a narrative of what had been done.
It is suggested, that the direction, given to the witness by Hall, to keep the oxen for the defendant, was an act, and that the declaration of a previous sale was admissible as part of the res gestae. It is difficult to see how the direction itself is competent evidence of a sale to the defendant; but if it were, the declaration by Hall, of what had taken place at any prior time, between himself and a third person, is no part of the res gestee, but simply a narrative of a past transaction. The rule excluding hearsay evidence would be of little value, if the direction of Hall, to *552keep the property for the defendant, being admitted, not as a declaration, but as an act, a thing done, you might attach to that direction a narrative by Hall of a past transaction of sale. It would be in effect attaching the principal to the incident, and the substance to the quality. Stiles v. Western Railroad, 8 Met. 44. Haynes v. Rutter, 24 Pick. 242; and cases before cited.
It may be added, that upon the defendant’s own hypothesis, the evidence offered was the declaration of one having no interest in the property when the declaration was made, in relation to a past event, the declarant being alive and a competent witness, Exceptions overruled.