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640 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY BLAKENEY VS. FERGUSON ET AL. A defendant in equity will be relieved, on appeal from a decree against him. on the merits, from an oppressive accumulation of costs, not necessary

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 641 TERM, 1854.] Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. obtaining the complainant's rights, but arising from the errors and imper­fections of his proceedings. To enjoin the' issuance of a writ of possession under the statute, awarded by a court of law, in favor of a purchaser of land at judicial sale under an execution issued against a party in possession, and where there is no allegation or pretence on the part of the adverse claimant, of any fear of waste or injury to the land in controversy,, is a totally unauthorized use of the. writ of injunction. Where the complainants' claim real estate under a derivative title, as that they are the widow and heirs of a deceased person to whom the prop­erty belonged, such allegation is a material one, and must be proved un­less admitted by the answer. The ef fect of a total failure to answer is an admission that the whole bill is true: but a part;al failure to answer does not admit the part unanswer­ed to be true. In such case the complainant must except to the answer for insufficiency, after which, if the defendant still refuse to answer, the whole bill will be taken as true; but if a replication be filed, without ex-ception, the complainant will be held to have dispensed with a better answer. It is a general rule, that the separate answer of- one defendant cannot be read in evidence at the hearing against his co-defendant, unless he refers to such answer as correct, or is so connnected with the answering party as to be bound, under the ordinary rules of law, by his confessions, dec­larations or admissions. The cases of Whiting & Slark vs. Beebe. Eng. at p. 561, and Barrague & wife vs. Siter, Price & Co.„ 4 Eng. 545, so far'as they conflict with this principle overruled. 'Where the admissions of one person are offered in evidence against an­other on account of their joint interest in the subject, the joint interest must be a subsisting one at the time the admission was made; and where on account of a derivative interest, such interest must have been ac-(mired after the admission was made by the per§ons from whom it was derived. Appeal from Pulaski Circuit Court in Chancery Hon. W. H. FEILD, Circuit Judge, presiding. This cause was argued at length upon other points . made than those decided: HEMPSTEAD, for the appellant. JORDAN, for the appellees, referring to 2 Danl. Ch. Pr'. 982. 1 Greenl. Ev. sec. 178, note 4 and 5. Whiting & Slark vs. Beebe, 7 Eng. 421, that the answer of Moses Ferguson was evidence against his co-defendant.

642 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY Mr. Justice SCOTT delivered the opinion of the Court. On the first day of the April term 1845 of the Pulaski Circuit Court, the appellant became the purchaser of the land in contro-versy. It was sold as the property of Moses Ferguson, by virtue of an execution, against him and one Michael Hogan, in favor

of one Nathaniel Midgett, upon a judgment obtained in May, 1843. During that term the appellant obtained a writ of pos­session upon his motion, to which Moses Ferguson appeared. From the judgment of the Pulaski Circuit Court granting the writ of possession, an appeal was taken to this court, where in the month of October, 1845, the judgment of the Pulaski court was affirmed. (1 Eng. R. 297.)

In the meantime, in the month of August, 1845, Mary Fergu-son, as widow, and Moses Ferguson and others, as heirs of Jo­seph Ferguson, deceased, filed a bill in chancery against the ap­pellant and the heirs of Sampson Gray, deceased, alleging that on the 5th of November, 1827, the sheriff of Pulaski county, in the then Territory of Arkansas, sold the land in controversy, in due course of law, for taxes, to the said Sampson Gray, arid exe­cuted to hini the prescribed certificate of purchase : that Gray sold the land to the said Joseph Ferguson for the sum of $ "in

hand, paid by the said Joseph to the said Sampson," with the ex­press understanding and agreement that he, Gray, would convey the land by deed as soon as he should himself receive one from the sheriff in pursuance of law and in accordance with his certi­ficate ; but that Gray departed this life before receiving such deed f rom the sheriff, and before making one to the said Joseph Fer­guson : that. by virtue of the aforesaid sale and agreement, Jo­seph Ferguson took possession of the land, and used and occu­pied it by putting his son, Moses Ferguson, in the possession and quiet enjoyment of the same : that Moses had continued to hold that possession, without adverse claim from any one, up to the 2d of April, 1836, when the said Joseph departed this life, and that since the death of Joseph, Moses had continued in the pos­session by the consent and permission of the heirs and adminis­trator of the said Joseph : that in April, 1845, the land had been

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 643 TERM, 1854.] Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al.

sold by execution as the property of Moses, and that the appel­lant Blakeney became the purchaser, who had received a deed. for it from the sheriff of Pulaski county, conveying all the title and interest of the said Moses. The bill, upon these alleged facts, proceeds to pray the court to decree to the heirs at law of Joseph Ferguson, a valid and suffic­ient title in law and equity . to the tract of land in question, upon condition that they allot to the widow, one third part as a dower . estate, and convey to the appellant, Blakeney, an undivided sixth part of the residue, or pay him an equivalent in money, the said sixth part being the alleged interest of . Moses in the land. To this bill, Blakeney interposed a demurrer assigning for cause ; 1St, That there was not equity upon the face of the bill. 2d, That complainants showed no title to the land, but a parol agree­ment between Gray and Joseph Ferguson, which is forbidden by the statute of frauds. 3d, No facts to take the case out of the statute.. 4th, No money paid in part performance. 5th, That the agreement was without consideration and void. The Circuit Court overruled the demurrer, and rendered a final decree in favor of complainants as to Blakeney, and an interlocu­tory one as to the heirs of Gray, who were duly, summoned, but made default. Blakeney appealed to this court, and upon a hearing here, at the January term, 1848, it was held that the facts alleged were sufficient to take the case out of the statute of frauds, but that the allegations were not sufficient to show title in Gray.. And the decree appealed from was reversed, and the cause remanded to be proceeded with according to the principles of equity, and not inconsistent with the opinion herein delivered. (3 Eng. R. 272.) While this cause was pending in the Circuit Court, and im­mediately after the decision of this court, in October, 1843, af­firming the judgment of the Pulaski Circuit Court, in the matter of the writ of possession, the same complainants, Mary Ferguson and others, filed their petition in the Pulaski Circuit Court,

that they had, on the 28th of August, 1845, filed the before

644 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [ JANUARY mentioned bill of complaint, and praying that a copy thereof, which they exhibited, might be taken as a part of their petition: that the defendants had been served with process of subpoena ; that the land in question had been sold as aforesaid, and pur­chased by Blakeney ; that the latter had obtained an order of

possession ; that the order had been appealed form to this court, where the judgment of the Circuit Court in the premises had been affirmed. And upon these alleged facts, verified by affidavit, prayed that the appellant, Blakeney, should be enjoined from all further proceedings with his writ of possession (the award of which had been so affirmed by this court,) until their bill aforesaid . should be finally heard and determined. This prayer was re­sisted by Blakeney, but his resistance was of no avail, and the injunction was awarded. Afterwards he interposed a demurrer to the petition and assigned for cause : 1st, That there was no equity upon the face of the petition. 2d, That it was an attempt

to re-investigate a matter already determined by this court, with­out any showing of further facts or new matter. 3d, .That the petition alleged no title to the land, but set up a parol agree­ment with regard thereto. 4th, That no sufficient facts were al­leged to take the case out of the statute of frauds. 5th, That no sum of money was alleged to have been paid in part perform-ance. 6th, That upon the face of the petition, the alleged agree­ment appears to have been made without consideration, and is therefore void, irrespective of the statute. 7th, That inasmuch as there is failure of any allegation of title, there is no ground upon which to base partition. Sth, That if on the other hand, title be alleged, then there is an adequate remedy at law.

Upon argument, the demurrer was overruled, and the appel-lant, Blakeney, declining to plead to, or answer the petition, the injunction was perpetuated, and plakeney appealed to this court, where upon a hearing at the January term, 1849, the decree of the Pulaski Circuit Court, perpetuating the injunction, was re-versed, and the cause remanded to be proceeded with, according to the principles of equity, and not inconsistent with the opinion therein delivered. (4 Eng. R. 487.)

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 645 TERM, 1854.] Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. In the meantime, the same complainants, at the October term, 1848, of the Pulaski Circuit Court, had filed an amended bill as a substitute for their original bill, held bad on demurrer by this court, at the January term, 1848, alleking with exceeding min­uteness the performance of every pre-requisite for a valid sale for taxes under the territorial statute, from its inception up to and including the issuance of the certificate of purchase to Sampson Gray in the year 1827 : that in 1828, before obtaining the sherif f's deed in pursuance of the certificate, Gray sold the land to Jo­seph Ferguson for the sum of fifty dollars, and received the mo­ney therefor ; and agreed that he would procure such deed and convey all his right, title and interest in the land to the said Jo-seph, and at the same time placed the latter in possession there-of, in pursuance of this contract : that no person offered to re­deem the land within the time prescribed by the statute : that Gray having departed this life before receiving such deed, made none to Joseph : that the representatives of Gray, after his death, delivered . to Joseph the certificate of purchase, 'under which and in pursuance of the contract of sale to him aforesaid, he , continu­ed to hold possession : that in 1831, Joseph placed his son Moses in possession of the land as his tenant, who occupied as such until the death of Joseph, in 1836 : that ever since then Moses has held the possession, by the consent and permission of the legal representatives and heirs at law of Joseph, subject to the rights of the latter, and of the widow ; with the understanding and agreement that he would yield possession whenever required for the purpose of assigning dower and making partition. The bill then sets out the levy and sale, as the property of Moses, and the purchase by, and conveyance to the appellant, Blakeney, by the sherif f,, Borden, of all the right, title and interest of Moses. And to the alleged end, that the title to the land in controversy may be quieted and vested in the proper owner thereof, and partition be made, conclude's with a prayer that the court will decree a valid and sufficient title in law and equity to the heirs at law, upon condition that they assign dower to the widow, and convey to Blakeney one-sixth - part of the residue, or pay him an equiva­lent in money, if actual partition be impracticable.

646 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY In February, 1849, Blakeney answered this amended bill, de­nying every material allegation as to the sale of the land for taxes ; and. the subsequent sale by Gray, to Joseph Ferguson, and the latter's possession under the alleged contract of sale: pleads that if any such sale and contract were made, it was within the 'statute of frauds, and no sufficient facts to take it without the statute: denies the delivery of the certificate of purchase to Jo­seph Ferguson, or that he ever held under it ; admits that Moses Ferguson held the quiet possession of the land in 1831, and be­fore and - afterwards, up to and after the commencement of this Suit, but denies that he held as tenant of Joseph during the life­time of the latter, or by consent and permission of the complain­ants since, but avers that he held it as his own absolute property; avers' that in 1837 or 1838, Moses, then in possession, offered to sell the land to the respondent, and was regarded in the commu­nity as the owner, and that nothing to the contrary was ever heard until respondent's purchase at sheriff's sale ;' avers that the owner of the-land, when it was sold for taXes, resided in the Territory of Arkansas, and continued to reside here, during the time when Moses Ferguson held the possession, for a sufficient length of time to give 'Moses a complete title under the statute of limitations, which vested in respondent by virtue of his pur­chase at sheriff's sale, of the interest and estate of Moses there-in: admits the sale and his purchase under the execution, and relies upon it, and pleads that he is an innocent purchaser, for a valuable consideration : avers that there is no equity on the face of this amended bill, and that no such title has been alleged by the complainants, as to entitle them to partition. The answe'r is verified by affidavit.

Hamilton Reynolds also answered for himself, and, by a sepa­rate answer, as guardian for the minor heirs of Sampson Gray, deceased, and admits upon information and belief that the land waS sold for taxes and purchased by Gray, deceased, and sold by him as alleged in the bill : admits the death of Gray, the delivery -of the certificate of purchase, afterwards, by his heirs at law and legal representatives, to Joseph ; that Joseph Ferguson placed

0 OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 647 TERM, 1854.] Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. Moses in the possession as alleged: that the interest of Moses was sold under execution and purchased by Blakeney : that he intermarried with the widow of Gray, and is guardian for the mi­nor heirs, and claims no interest either in right of his wife, or as guardian, or otherwise. In his answer as guardian, he makes a formal denial of all the allegations of the bill and requires proof.

The death of Henry C. Gray after the commencement of the .Suit was suggested, and a decree pro confesso taken against the other defendants in default. RepliCations having been filed, is­

sue was regularly formed, the cause set down for final hearing, and an order for deposition reguarly made. Afterwards, on motion, upon no other showing than the face of the bill and an­swer in, the name of Moses Ferguson was stricken out as a plain­tiff and he was made a co-defendant, and his deposition ordered to be taken; to which Blakeney excepted. Moses answered and ad­mitted all the material allegations of the amended bill. Various exceptions were taken to the depositions, which it is unnecessary to notice, for any other purpose than to remark that numerous affidavits were broUght in pro and con, and several of them were ruled out and retaken. Cr-At this stage of the proceedings, on the 12th of February, 1850, the mandate of this court, upon the reversal of the decree of the Circuit Court, which perpetuated the injunction of Blakeney from proceeding with his writ of possession, was filed, and a . motion made to dissolve the injunction in accordance therewith, and for

an order of possession.

Three days afterwards„ to wit : on the 15th of February, 1850, the complainant filed an amended petition for an injunction, which varied nothing material from the original one, otherwise than by incorporating the amended bill in lieu of the original bill, and prayed that the injunction might be continued until the final hearing of the bill and then perpetuated. On the 9th of Aug., 1851, the motion to dissolve the injunction and the petition to continue

0 648 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY it, came on to be heard—they seeming to have slumbered in the meantime. The former. was overruled and the latter granted, and the two causes consolidated and ordered to progress to final

hearing together as one cause, all against the objection of Blake-ney, to which he filed his bill of exceptions. Ultimately, on the 21st January, 1852, after the exceptions of Blakeney to the depo­sitions of William Saunders, James Erwin and Moses Ferguson, taken on the 12th and 13th of December, 1851, on the part of the con-iplainant, had been overruled, the cause came on for final hearing upon the amended bill and exhibits; the amended peti­tion and all the answers and replications, the depositions above mentioned and those of Samuel .M. Rutherford and William E.

Woodruff, taken on the 13th and 11th of January, 1851, (to which

exceptions had been before overruled and saved) and the exhib­its referred to in said deposition. Whereupon it was decreed that the land in controversy should be sold for cash by a com­missioner of the court, that out of the proceeds he should pay 41 the costs accrued in the Circuit Court in these causes, and out of the balance pay the appellant Blakeney one-sixth part, and pay the residue into that court, subject to its future order. But that in the event the proceeds of the sale should be insufficient to pay all these costs, that Blakeney should pay one-sixth part of the deficit and the complainants the residue; and that the injunction against Blakeney from proceeding with his order of possession should be perpetuated. To all of which Blakeney excepted and has appealed to this court.

Thus at the end of about eight years from their inceptions these voluminous proceedings were brought to an end in the Cir­cuit Court, after having been in the meantime before this cOurt for correction three several times ; and it may be remarked as to the result, that this is not only materially variant from the osten­sible object of the complainants, in procuring by decree title to the land in law and equity, and dower estate for the widow, but - is oppressive upon the defendant, in putting heavy costs upon him, accumulated by the errors and imperfections of the plain-tiff's anomalous proceedings ; while at the same time, the de-

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 649 TERM, 1854.1 Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al.

fendant, during most of ,this long period of time, has been kept out of his finally adjudged right to his writ of possession, and its fruits, by the totally unauthorized use of the writ of injunction, as appears, throughout the proceedings, by the complainants' own showing. There was no allegation of pretence that the complainants ever feared any waste, or any injury at all to the land in controversy, much less that the defendant had threatened any such irreparable mischief, as it is the object of an injunction to- prevent ; while at the same time they expressly showed that the defendant claimed by adverse title, and as between him and them, the title was at least disputed, if not doubtful. (6 Ves. R. 89, id. 51.)

Although the appellant may not avail himself of any objection to the decree relating to title -or dower,- because he may not be injured thereby, or for its failure to compensate him for the legi­timate fruits of his writ of possess;on, of which he has so long been deprived by this clear abuse of the writ of injunction, be­cause Ile has not so shaped his defence as to make this objection evadable to him in this way, he may nevertheless, at least claim in this court to be released from the onerous weight of the ex­cessive costs, which the complainants' . anomalous and imperfect process has accumulated in the case, beyond the legitimate costs of such a proceeding, (Dig. ch. 40, sec. 23, p. 284.)

Passing by the various objections to the depositions, upon which this cause was tried, and which are saved by the appel-lants' bill of exceptions, as well as some other points of minor importance that have been suggested we shall proceed at once to a . conclusive objection to the decree, which is decisive of this cause. - The complainants come into court upon a derivative' title, set­ting up that theY are the widow and heirs at law of Joseph Fer-guson, deceased, and make their claim as such under him. This was a material part of their case. It was indeed of the very gist of their bill. The defendant answered, denying seriittim almost every other allegation. Prefacing his answer : with the usual re-servation, and conclUding it, after a denial in terms of any "such

650 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY title in the complainants or any of them as entitle them to par-tition," with the usual formula "without this," &c. To this the complainants, without any exception for insufficiency or other cause, interposed their replication in short upon the record by consent : the language of which, in the precedents, is that "these repliants say, that they will aver and prove their said bill to be true, certain,"&c., and "that the said answer is uncertain, un-true, &c. All which matters and things these repliants are, and will be, ready to aver and prove," &c.

At the hearing, no proof was of fered to establish that the com­plainants were the widow and heirs of Joseph Ferguson, deceas-ed, other than the answer of Moses Ferguson; and the first ques­tion is, whether therefore, these material facts were admitted by the answer of Blakeney, the appellant.

According to the theory of a proceeding in equity, the bill al­though sworn to, is never, at the hearing, evidence for the com­plainant in any other sense than as an admission of the defendant, either express or implied. It does not recognize the right of the complainant to become a witness in his own behalf, but to com­pel the defendant to become a witness in the cause, to the extent of a response to every allegation in the bill, and, in general, to confess or deny every one of those, the admission of the truth of which may entitle the complainant to his legitimate relief. The effect of a total failure to answer, is an admission that the whole bill is true, if the defendant continues in this contempt, of the consequences of which he was warned originally before this ef­fect was absolute ; of which there are equivalent provisions in. our statute. But it does not follow from this, that a partial fail­ure to answer admits the fact unanswered to be true, without any warnings at all. On the contrary, if upon exceptions sustained to such an answer, the defandant fails to answer further, instead of the part unanswered being taken as true at all as such, the whole bill is taken pro confesso generally; precisely as if no an­swer at all had been of fered, (Jopling vs. Stewart, 4 V es. 619 ; Turner vs. Gray, ib. in .note, and other cases there cited ;) and thus the defendant is allowed time and opportunity for repentance as

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 651 . TERM, 1854.1 Makeney vs. Ferguson et aL before. In harmohy with this is the formula of reservation, at the commencement.of the answer, which it is said in 2 NIcici. Ch. 333, was probabl y intended to prevent a conclusion that the de­fendant having submitted to answer the bill, admitted everything which by his answer he did not, l in express terms, controvert. And also the rule of allowing the plaintiff to except to an an­swer for insufficiency, not only when the defendant fails to dis-cover, but when he fails to admit or deny, or evades any material allegation. If the ef fect of a partial answer be, to admit the truth of the part unanswered, why except at all? Such an effect would be equivalent to an answer expressly admitting the part unanswered, and therefore make exceptions unnecessary.

These exceptions serve to give notice to the defendant of mat­ters which may, without design, have escaped his attention, or have not sufficiently arrested it, and enable him to do what he would 'have otherwise done, and thus saVe hith frOm surprise. And certainly, in such cases he is More entitled to warning than when in contempt for failing to answer at all, or to make fur-ther. answer upon exceptions sustained for insufficiency.•

Inasmuch then, as when there is a total failure to answer, the complainant can by pro confesso get an implied admission of his yvhole bill ; and equally so, when, upon exception sustained; there is a failure to answer further ; and as he can require this as well as in- aid for his proofs, or to avoid expense, as in cases where,he cannot prove the facts at all otherwise than by discovery ; and as the opposite could not be otherwise than mischievous, in often resulting in surprise to thc defendant, it seems far more reasona­ble that after replication without exception to an answer, which may fall short of a perfect one, the complainant should- be held to have dispensed with the benefits of a better one, , and thereby to have relied upon his own proofs ; than that the defendant should be held to have admitted the truth without warning of what might have, without design, escaped his notice.

And to this effect is the decided weight of authority, qualified however in some of the cases by an exception, where the omitted or evaded fact may be prima facic within the knowledge of the

652 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Biakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY defendant, (Cochran vs. Couper adm'r, 1 Harrington R.202. Tate m. Conner; 2 Dev. Ch. R. 224. Lum vs. Johnson, 3 Iredell Ch. R. 70. Young vs. Grundy, 6 Cranch. 51. Coleman vs. Lyne's Ex'r, 4 Rand. R. 456. Cropper vs. Barton, 5 Leigh R. 432. Stewart vs. 'Strong, 3 Gill & John. 510. Joice vs. Tayloe, 6 Gill & John. 54.) But any exception would seem to be a departure from the prin­ciple and policy of equity practice, and of mischievous tendency. In Kentucky, where the exception prevails, it was held in the case of Owings vs. Patterson et al., 1 A. K. Marsh. R. 325, in which the complainants-claimed title to land as the heirs at law of Patterson, and f rom the generality and vagueness of the answer, the court was unable to determine whether or not the defendants intended to put the heirship in issue, that the proof of that material ingre­dient in. the complainant's case was upon them at the hearing, and for want of it in the record, reversed the decree in their favor

for that cause alone.

In the light of .these views and of the authorities that we have exaniined and cited above, we have no doubt but that it was in­cumbent upon the complainants below in this case„to prove at. the hearing that they were the widow and heirs at law of Joseph Ferguson, deceased, under whom they set up their claim for re-lief, and so hold.

The question is then presented, whether or not the answer of Moses Ferguson, in which these facts are expressly admitted, was evidence to this point against his co-defendant Blakeney, the appellant. And waiving any question as to whether he was properly any party at all, we shall proceed at once to this in-quiry.

We have already seen that the operation of an answer, as evi­dence for the complainant is by way of admission. So, Judge STORY said, in Reimsdyke vs. Kane, (1 Gall. R. 636,) when speak­ing of the admissions of one co-partner, which bind another, "an answer is no more than an admission, though a very solemn one." "But an admission in an answer is something more than ey idence : it is a concession in pleading, which requires ncP corrobo-rating, and allows of no countervailing proofs," as was remarked

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 653 TERM, 1854.] Blakeney vs. Ferguson -et al.

by Judge BALDWIN, in the case of Pettit vs. Jennings, 2 Robt. Va. R. 684. And hence upon the reasonable foundation that no one can admit in evidence, or concede in pleading for another, ex­cept in these cases where he is so combined with that other, either legally or by fraud, that the act of one is the act of the other, rest the unquestionable general rule and its exceptions : that the sepa­rate answer of one or more defendants cannot be- read in evi­dence to sustain the complainants' bill against a co-defendant.

If it were otherwise, a complainant might so frame his bill, as to elicit evidence from one defendant to charge another, .and to exclude such matters as might discharge him. And the evidence thus obtained would be obnoxious to the objections against lead­ing questions, and of being used against a party deprived of the important privilege of cross-examination, whereby the complain­ant would have undue advantages against the most manifest principles of impartial justice. Indeed it would place an as­signee or vendee completely in the power of his assignor or ven-dor, and subject him to the danger of being made the helpless vic­tim of a fraudulent collusion. Nor does any failure of justice result from rejecting the answer of one defendant as evidence against a co-defendant, because the complainant does not deprive him­self of the testimony of one defendant against another by his act, of associating them together as defendants, as in a court of law. If he be not ,incompetent, or privileged by reason of his interest, the complainant may still examine him as a witness. If he be so, however, his answer can avail the complainant nothing, un­less he has admitted it in the allegation sought to be proved. And when he has done so,.he is no longer privileged, because he has already given evidence against himself.

In the case last cited, upon the question, whether the answer-of the assignor of a bond admitting the gaming consideration alleged in the bill, could be read in evidence against his co-de-fendant and his assignee, who had denied all knowledge of it, the doctrine we are examining was gone into at large, both upon principle and authority ; and it was expressly found by the Vir­ginia court, that the same principles which govern admissions -in

654 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY pais, whether verbal 'or written, or made in a former suit, to which the party against whom they were offered was not a party, whe­ther by pleading or evidence or otherwise, govern also, in like manner, an admission in the answer of one defendant in a pend­ing suit, when Offered as evidence against his co-defendant.

To the same effect was the conclusion of . the Illinois court, in the case of Martin vs. Dr yden et al., (1 Gillman R. 209,) in a case where the vendor and vendee of land were defendants, when they 'said, "A better test to determine when such an answer would be evidence against- a co-defendant claiming under him, or in the same right, as in the case of partners, or successors, is an answer to the question, would his admissions be evidence? Wherever the latter would be admissible, a fortiori, would his answer." To the same effect is the language of Judge STOR y , in Reimsdyke vs. Kane et al., 1 Gall. R. 635.

It is accordingly laid down in Mr. Adam s excellent work on the doctrines of Equity, page 20, that "The discovery obtained . by a bill in equity is only available against the answering defen-dant. It cannot be read in evidence against a co-defendant, unless he refers to it by his answer as correct, or is so connected with the answering party as to be bound, under the ordinary rules of law, by his declarations and admissions." For this he cites Mitt 188; Anon. 1 P. Wm. 301; Chewcs vs. Jones, 6 Mad. 267; Cropc vs. Bedinfield, 12 Sim. 35; and Green vs. Pledger, 3 Hare 165. To whiCh the American Editors append numerous American cases, including the States of Maine, Vermont, New York. Mississippi, Virginia, Alabama and . Maryland; to which they ray numerous other cases may. be added.

It has been supposed, however, that the "rule does not apply to cases where the defendant claims through him whose answer is offered in evidence," as is laid down in GREENLEAF'S work on Evidence, p. 210, sec. 178: or, as it is elsewhere expressed, "Where one defendant succeeds to another, so that the right Of the one devolves on the other, and they become privies in estate." per Chief Justice MARSTIAI.1„ in Osborn vs. 7'he Bk. of the U. States, 9 Wheat. R. 332.

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 655 TERM , 18541 Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. This last mentioned case and that of Field vs. Holland, 6 Cranch R. 21, are the only two cases, besides those that have followed them as authority,) that give any sanction by this sup­posed exception. These two cases were cited by the court of ap­peals of Maryland in the year 1839; as an authority upon a point like that we are now considering, and that court disposed of them with the following language : "We have given to them.a thorough examination and respectful consideration, but not being con­vinced of their correctness by the reason assigned in their sup-port, and being unable to reconcile them to an otherwise unbro­ken series of authorities, both English and American, we do not hold ourselves bound to conform to them. (Jones vs. Hardesly et al, 10 Gill & John. R. at p. 415.)

The decision of the Maryland court upon this point, was ap-proved, as a "well considered" one, by Chancellor WALWORTH, in the case of Cristie vs. Bishop, (1 Barbour's Ch. R. at p. 121,)

,where the assignor and assignee of a judgment were the parties defendant to a bill alleging usury in the original transaction and the subsequent premiums for insurance; and the question was whether the answer of the former, admitting the truth of the alle-gation, could be read in evidence against the latter, who denied all knowledge as to all or any of the matters in the bill, except some unimportant particulars ; and he thus proceeds to remark upon these two decisions of the SupreMe Court at Washington,. which was cited to him as authority, "There are indeed two cases in which the late Chief Justice Marshall is supposed to have ex pressed an opinion, that the rule, that the answer of one defen­dant could not be read in evidence against another, except when they hold a joint interest, does not apply to the case of a defend­ant who has derived title to the subject matter of litigation, under or through the one whose answer is offered in evidence against such defendant. (Field vs. Holland, 6 Cranch. 24; Osborn vs. U. S. Bank, 9 Wheat. 332.) And I see that the first of . these cases.

is referred to by Professor Greenleaf, in his recent yery valuable - treatise on the law of Evidence, (Greenl. Ev. p. 210, sec. 178,) as sustaining the same principle.

656' CASES EN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY "In the case of Field vs. Holland, this precise question was not before the court ; and the opinion of Chief Justice MARSHALL only goes to the point, that the answer of a defendant, through whom the co-defendant claims, is evidence in favor of such co-defen-dant, as to matters which both were called on to answer, in rela­tion to transactions \vhich took place before the sale to such co-defendant. It may perhaps be inferred from the language of the Chief justice in that case. that if the answer of 1-Tolland had ad­mitted the facts charged in the complainant's bill, instead of de­nying them, it could have been used as evidence against his co-defendant, who had purchased under the judgment in his favor against Cox. But there certainly was nothing to authorize the reporter, in the syllabus of the decision in that case, to state, as a point decided by the court, that the answer of one defendant is evidence against other defendants claiming through him. In the case of Osborne vs. The U. S. Bank, the question arose as to how far the answer. of one treasurer of the State of Ohio, was

evidence against his successor in office, as to the identity of fundS taken from the Bank by a former treasurer, both being joined as defendants in the same bill. And in reference to the principle of evidence, that the answer of one defendant cannot be read in evi­dence against another, Ch. j. MARSHALL says, "This is generally, but not universally true. Where one defendant succeeds to ano-ther, so that the right of the one devolves on the other, and they become privies in estate, the rule is not admitted to apply. Thus, if an ancestor die pending a suit, and the proceedings be revived against his heir, or if a suit be revived against an executor or ad-ministrator, the answer of the deceased . person, or any other evi­dence establishing any other fact against him, might be read also

.agains't the person who succeeds to him." And it certainly seems to have been the opinion of the court in that case, that these principles, the correctness of which no one ean dispute, were applicable to the case of an answer put in by a defendant, who had parted with all interest in the subject matter of litiga-tion, previous to the commencement of a skit, to one who was afterwards made a co-defendant with him in such suit. But there

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 657 TERM, 18541 Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. is a manifest difference between that case and the case supposed in the opinion of the learned Chief justke. For in the case sup-posed, the ancestor or of the deceased party, is -an admission inade by him while Ile was owner of the subject matter of litiga­tion and was such as may be given in evidence against any per­son claiming title under him subsequent to such admission. And upon the same principle, if a bill is taken. as confessed against a defendant before his death, and the suit is subsequently revived against his heir, or personal representative, they must apply to vacate the order taking the bill as confessed, if they wish to con­trovert the allegations in the bill, or set up any defence except such as has arisen subsequent to that order. For the sufficiency of the bill to be taken as confessed against him, was an admis­sion by the original defendant, while he was aldne interested in the subject matter of the litigation, that the allegations in the complainant's bill were true, and that he had no valid defence to the claim made by the complainant, except such as appeared from the bill itself. The question, howeve -r, now under -conside-ration, did not necessarily arise in the case of Osborn vs. The U. S. Bank, because the answer of Sullivan, the successor of Currie, contained a distinct admission that Ile received the money in con­troversy from Currie, his predecessor in office, who informed him at the time he delivered the money that it was the money which had been taken from the bank—that answer was therefore of it­self evidence of the identity of the funds---for it contained evidence of the declaration of the former treasurer, made at the time he parted with the money to his successor. It was not therefore evi­dence of a declaration of the treasurer, after he had parted with all his interest in the fund of the defendant Sullivan. And as I underStand the case, the decision of the court is placed upon that ground : though it is evident the opinion of the learned Chief , Jus-tice, was 'that the answer of Currie, under the circumstances of the case, was admissible in evidence as against a co-defendant."

The case was, that before the money in controversy had been taken from the Bank, a subpoena in chancery, and an injunction had been served Upon Osborne,' the Auditor, whose duty it was

658 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY to execute the act of the Ohio Legislature, under the specific pro­visions of which, the money was afterwards taken by his agent, the collector of the revenue, with a full knowledge that the order for the injunction had been made. By this agent the money was. delivered to Currie, the Treasurer, who, after keeping it a few days, transferred ifs possession to Sullivan, his successor in office. The bill was afterwards amended, alleging the facts that had trans­pired subsequently to tile order for the injunction, and Currie and Sullivan made co-defendants with Ogborne.

When in connection with this State of the case, the whole of the remarks of Chief Justice MARSHALL, are considered, (as well as those quoted by the learned Chancellor, as those which imme­diately follow them,) it will not appear improbable but that the Chief Justice designed them all to apply only to defendants, who succeeded to rights or purchased the subject matter of litigation pendente lite; and that he regarded the case before him as, sub-stantially, one of that character. .If so, although the learned chancellor is doubtless to be sustained in his understanding of the true ground upon which the court decided the cause—that of the answer of Sullivan alone, whereby all that is said of the ad­missibility of Currie's answer, is left as the dictum only of the Chief Justice—his impressions as to the extent of the views, of the latter would be too latitudinous. While the more limited scope suggested for them, if sustainable would relieve those views from the otherwise just imputation of heterodoxy cast upon them bv the learned chancellor.

In the case of Pettit vs. Jennings, already cited, the court of ap­peals of Virginia, after coincident views with those of Chancellor WALWORTH, as to the departure of the case of Field vs. Holland, from settled principles and unbroken authority, when taken to have gone the extent of ruling that the answer of. Holland would be evidence against his co-defendants claiming through and un­der him, had it admitted instead of denying the allegations of the bill, as has been inferred, and is stated in the syllabus of the reporter; which they pronounce "wrong" as to this : proceeds to give a version of the Case, which relieves it from all criticism, as

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 659 TERM, 1854.1 Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al.

follows : "The principle of this decision is not that.the answer of a defendant is evidence for the plaintiff against a co-defendant, but that, when responsive to the bill 'it is evidence against the plaintiff, for the responding defendant, and enures . to the benefit of his co-defendant, claiming under him, when it destroys the foun­

dation of the plaintiff's claim. The language of the court is as follows : 'Neither is it to be admitted that the answer of Holland is not testimony against the plaintiffs. He is the party against whom the fact, that the judgments were discha*d,. is to be es-tablished, and against whom it is to operate.. This fact, when established, it is true, affects the purchasers also ; but it affects them consequentially and through him. It affects them as rep­resent him. Consequently, when the fact is established against or for him, it binds them. The plaintiffs themselves call upon Holland for a discovery. The y aver that the judgments were discharged and expressly require him to answer this allegation.

They cannot now be allowed to say that this answer is no testi-mony.' It will be seen that the reasoning of the court is at first somewhat indefinite ; we presume for the purpose of avoiding the very inference which has been erroneously &awn from it. Its object was to show, in the first . place, that the fact of the pay­ment or non-payment of the judgment, when properly established, would not only be evidence for or againSt the plaintiff therein, but would operate for 'or against the ptirchasers, (who were the co-defendants) under the authority thereof ; at the same time avoid­ing the designation of the mode by which that fact, whether affir­mative or negative, was to be established; and then to show that in the case before the court it was established negatively by the re-

. sponsive answer of the defendant, Holland. There could be no propriety in intimating any opinion as to what would be the ef­fect of a directly opposite state of facts, to wit: an admission by the defendant Holland in his answer of the allegations in the bill, and in fact no such . opinion was intimated." Pettit.vs. Jennings, 2 Robt. Va. R. at p. 682. These two cases of Field vs. Holland, and Osborn vs. The Bank of the U. States being then disposed of, there are no other

660 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [ JANUARY

cases in the United States, except a few that have been decided expressly upon their supposed authority, which give any color, as we have already remarked, to the supposed exception to the general rule, which we . have been examining. And Chancellor WALWORTH, after his criticisms upon these two cases, and an elaborate examination of the various decisions to the contrary, re-marks, "I have not been able to find any case in the reports of the court of chancery in England or in Ireland, in which the an­swer of one defendant has been permitted to be read in evidence against another, except in those cases where the defendants were combined, either legally or fraudulently, so as to create a unity of interest between them." (Christie vs. Bishop, 1 Barb. Ch. Rep. at p. 120.

There are other cases, however, besides that of Field vs. Hol-land, where the answer of one defendant, in its operation against the complainant is allowed to operate also for the protection and

shelter of a co-defendant. So, there are cases where the answer of the responding defendant ,although in favor of the complain-

ant, operates also 'for the like shelter of a co-defendant. But neither class of cases in any degree violates the rule, that the answer of one defendant cannot be read in evidence against his

co-defendant, or makes any exception to it, otherwise than in the merest matter of form, without any substance at all—all being in conformity to the ordinary rules of law as to confessions, de­clarations and admissions. Of the former class is the American case of Mills vs. Gore, (20 Pick. R. 28,) where the protected de­fendant occupied the attitude of stakeholder, having been the mu­

tual depository of the subject matter, and upon the bill of one of the contestants was made a co-defendant with the other, and de­fended himself under his claim. Thus circumstanced, he was allowed to read the answer in his favor upon the two grounds, as the court put it, that the complainants haying called Upon the responding defendant for the discovery, he could not be allowed to say that his answer was no evidence in the cause; and that such testimony, when in favor of a co-defendant, was not within the reason of the rule, excluding the answer of one defendant

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 661 TERm, 1854.] Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. against another, because in the former case, the important privi­lege of cross-examination is not sacrificed as in the latter.

Of the latter class; is the English case of Greene vs. Pledger, (3. Hare's Rep. 165,) where the case made by the bill, was that Ber-nard Angle, a bankrupt, for the purpose of swindling .his cre-ditors, secretly put money in the hands of his brother, John Angle, on the secnrity of two promissory notes executed by Pledger, who knew that the money was the assets of the bank­rupt : that when John Angle was summoned to attend, as a wit-ness, on the fiat against his hrother, Bernard, he refused to at­tend and absconded to Boulogne. The two promissory notes pay­able to John Angle, were taken from his possession by the messenger under the fiat, and delivered to the complainant, who was the official and creditors' assignee of the bankrupt : and the notes not being endorsed, the complainant could not recover upon them at law against Pledger. Pledger answered admitting his liability to John Angle, but ignored altogether the case of the complainant, not admitting that the money, as alleged, was .a part of the assets of the bankrupt, and submitted that if the court should be of opinion that the complainants were entitled to the notes, or the beneficial interest in them, that then he ought to be. considered a stakeholder and be allowed his costs. Under an English statute, John Angle was served at Boulogne with a sub­poena to appear and answer the bill. Afterwards the vice chan­cellor made an order that the service of a notice of motion upon John Angle at Boulogne, should be good service. The notice was accordingly served, and the motion then made, (founded. upon affidavits as against John Angle) that Pledger should pay the money into court. John Angle did not appear, and the mo­tion came on to be heard on the affidavits as against him, and upon the answer of Pledger to the bill already in. The Vice Chancellor in granting this motion, said : "The defendant Pledger­admits his liability to John Angle, and ignores only the question of right as between the plaintiff and John Angle. If John Angle were-not a party to this suit, the plaintiffs would have to join issue with Pledger upon their right as against John Angle, and would be bound to prove that right as against Pledger. But the-latter being a par--

662 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [JANUARY ty, it is with him, and him only, that the plaintiffs have to litigate that right : and a decree in the plaintiffs' favor against John An­gle will be a sufficient protection to Pledger. That it is with John Angle, the plaintiffs have to litigate that question is clear from the consideration, that an admission by John Angle in his answer, of the plaintiff's right as against himself, would, entitle the plaintiff\to a decree according to the prayer of the bill. At the same time it is clear that John Angles' answer would not, technically speaking, be evidence against Pledger. So, if the bill were taken pro confesso against John Angle, or if the plaintiffs' rights, as against John Angle, were proved by evidence not re­

ceivable against Pledger. The consequence of both John Angle and Pledger being parties to the suit is, that a decree in the plaint-iff's favor will decide the case between the co-defendants. (Chain-lev vs. Lord Dunsanev,2 Sch. & .Lef. 718. Farquharson vs. Seton, 5 Russ. per Lord ELDON,) I might refer to analogous cases, .in 'which a disclaimer by one defendant has enabled the plaintiff to sustain his suit against_ another defendant ; the 'principle being, that after a decree founded upon the disclaimer, the court will not permit the disclaiming party to open the question anew, (Leathes vs. Newitt, 3 Ea. & Go. 848. Mounsey vs. Burnham., 1 Hare 21.") After showing him that the case before him was unlike the case of Doubless vs. Flint, (1 Myln. & Cr. 502,1 the Vice Chancellor then concludes with the remark : "I want no evidence but what his answer gives me, and I take nothing from him but what he admits he has no right to hold as against John Angle. Against John Angle the case is . established, for the present purpose at least, by the affidavits, to the reception of which he could not ob-

ject.'

The affidavits, by which this motion was -supported, being ta-ken, upon the hearing of the motion, as equivalent to the answer of John Angle, confessing the complainants' equity upon the final hearing, it will be seen that this latter case differs from the Mas­sachusetts case, just cited, mainly in the fact, that the answer of the real litigant defendant, was offered to be read by tfie complainant in the bill, instead of by the co-defendant, as 'in the Massachusetts case ; and that, in the one case, the answer

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 663 TERM, 1854.] Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. read denied the . equity of the bill, while in the English case it is taken as confessing it. But the same principle governs both cases. That is to say, in neither was the answer read in evi­dence against the co-defendant. In the Massachusetts case it was not against him, because he set up no right of his own, and the answer was against the complainant and in favor of the re­sponding defendant, in whose right he made his defence. So, in the English case, it was not against the co-defendant, Pledger, as the Vice Chancellor labors to show by several illustrations, among others the case of a disclaiming defendant, while he dis­tinctly recognizes the rule, that the answer of one defendant can­not be read in evidence against another ; and concludes by re­peating the idea, which he had been enforcing throughout: I want no evidence against Pledger, but what his answer gives me, and I take nothing from him but what he admits he has no right to hold as against John Angle."

In both cases, however, the decree for and against the com-plainants, respectively, operated for the protection of the defen-dants, respectively, whose interest was balanced between the real litigating parties as would be the complainant's attitude in a bill of interpleader.

We ha-ve used this case of Green vs. Pledger by way of il-lustration, and have set it out at large, not only because it is

apposite, but also because Mr. DANIEL, in his work on Chancery Pleading and Practice, ( Vol. 2, p. 9820 has, upon the single foun­

dation of this case, built what he seems to consider an exception to the general rule, and has expressed his 'idea of it in terms so vague and general as to be calculated to mislead, as well by those means as by giving to the case more prominence and im­portance than -it deserves. The passage in his work to which we allude is this : "In cases, however, where the rights of the plain-tiff, as against one defendant, are only prevented from being complete by some question between the plaintiff and a second defendant, it seems that the plaintiff is permitted to tead the an­swer of such second defendant for the purpose of completing his, claim against the first ;" and it was cited by this court as one of

664 CASES IN THE SUPREME COURT Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. [ JANUARY the authorities for admitting an exception to the general rule in the case of Whiting & Slark vs. Beebe et al. (7 Eng. R. 561 :) the other authorities cited being Field vs. Holland, Osborne vs. The Bank of the U. States, and Morse vs. Royal, 12 Ves. R. 355; which latter was a case where Green, a part of whose answer was re­ceived as evidence, was a defendant in the double capacity as ex­ecutor of one deceased party, and as residuary legatee of another, between the estates of which deceased parties there was a compli­cation of interest ; and Lord Erskine allowed so much of his an­swer to be read, relating to his capacity of executor as was not in favor of his interest as a residuary legatee. And the same authorities had been before cited in the case of Barraque & wife Siter, Price & Co.„ 4 Sng. R. 545, where it was said that the

rule of exclusion did not apply to cases where the defendant claims through him, whose answer is offered in evidence. But holding, as we must now do, after,a more careful and thorough examination of the question, in which we have closely scrutinized these authorities, that the answer of one defendant cannot be read in evidence against his co-defendant, unless he refers to such answer as correct, or is so connected with the answering party as to be bound, under the ordinary rules of law, by his confessions, declarations or admissions, it is proper for us to re­mark that the doctrine of those cases upon this point must be so modified as to conform to the views now expressed.

In reference to that exception to the general rule of evidence, that the .admissions of one person cannot be given in evidence against another, which is founded upon and arises out of the con­nection of interest between the person making the admission and him against wham it is offered—as that of joint ownership or lia-bility, or that of the derivation of title of one several owner from another—there is this essential difference between a joint interest and a derivative interest, that is always of . controlling import upon a question of admissibility, that is to say, the joint inter­est to be affected by the admission must be a subsisting. one, at the time the admission was made ; whereas in the other case, the derivative interest to be affected by the admission was made,

OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS. 665 TERM, 18541 Blakeney vs. Ferguson et al. must have been acquired after the admission was made. Whe­ther the party making the admission and the party against whom it is offered, be connected by a joint ownership or liability, or by the transmission of . a several title, from the former to the latter, the interest of the party Making the admission mtist be a subsisting one at the time of the admission. If at the time of making it he has parted with his interest, his admissions are not legal evidence against him to whom it has passed. Upon this point the authorities are clear and numerous, and without excep­tion or qualification in the application of the rule to vendors and assignors. Indeed the Supreme Court of New York, in the cases of Beach vs. Wise,1 Hill's R. 612, and Starke vs. Boswell. 6 Hilt R. 495, have gone . beyond this, and held that the admission of a former owner ot personal property, or of a chose in action, even if made before he parted with his title, are not evidence against his vendee. This would seem, however, to be an invasion upon es­tablished principles of evidence.

Applying these principles to the answer of Moses Ferguson, it is entirely clear that it was not admissible as evidence against his co-defendant Blakeney.

The result is, that the complainants have no evidence in the re­cord to prove their material allegation, that they are the widow and heirs at law of Joseph Ferguson, deceased, under whom they claim to derive title to the land in controvers y. Upon this ground then as well as that already considered as to costs, this decree must be reversed, and as the record does . not furnish the materials upon which we can found another decree, which would reach all the merits of this case, we shall order the bill to be dismissed without prejudice to the rights of the complainants, and at their costs ;- that the appellant; Blakeney, may at once have the bene­fit of his writ of possession that has already been affirmed to him

by this court.

 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.