Perhaps we can withdess prolixity invesr tigate the alleged errors,, in the order in which they are presented by the bill of exceptions; and,
1. The Circuit Court did not err in admitting the deed of gift from Chambers to Graham, the trustee, for. the use, &c., of Mrs. Perry, to be read to the jury. It is true the deed is not to be regarded as a recorded instrument, having been acknowledged before the clerk of the County Court,.whereas the statute requires such deeds to be “ acknowledged or. proved by one. or more witnesses, in the Circuit or County Court of the county, wherein one of the parties-lives.” — Clay’s Dig., 2.55, § 2; Sewall v. Glidden, 1 Ala. 52. This statute was designed to prevent frauds upon creditors and subsequent bona fide purchasers from the donor, and as no person filling either class has any connection with this suit, we do not see how the statute has any application. The deed is good as between the parties, without registration — (Sewall v. Glidden, 1 Ala. 52; Myers v. Peck, 2 ib. 648; McRea v. Pegues, 4 ib., 158; Foster v. Mitchell, 15 ib., 571,) — and considered in connection with the proof made in the cause, both before and subsequent to its introduction, conducing to show a title to the slave in the grantor, it was clearly admissible, as relevant to the issue involved.
2. We cannot percieve what influence the proof of Chambers’ opposition to the marriage of his grand daughter to the plaintiff could legitimately have had upon this cause. If he had perfected a gift of the slave to Mrs. Perry before the marriage, he had no power longer over the property, and conse*825quently his favor or opposition to the marriage would be wholly unimportant, as affecting the title to it. If after the marriage he bad the right to dispose of the slave by deed to the separate use of Mrs. Perty, the fact being conceded, the motive which prompted him thus to execute the deed becomes unimportant. So that we conceive the fact, that the donor would have opposed the marriage of his grand daughter, had he been apprised that it was about to occur, to be incapable of affording any reasonable presumption as to the title to the slave, and calculated to mislead and prejudice the minds of the jury. — 1 Green!. Ev., ^ 52.
3. The Circuit Court clearly misconceived the law in excluding the declaration made by Miss McKewall, when in possession of the slave, that she belonged to her. This declaration was explanatory of the possession and was clearly admissible by numerous adjudications of this court. — See the authorities cited on the brief of plaintiff’s counsel, and Nelson v. Iverson, 17 Ala. 216; Hadden’s Ex’rs v. Powell, ib. 314; Mobley v. Bilberry, ib. 428; Thomas v. Degraffenreid, ib. 602; Garey v. Terrell, 9 ib. 206; McBride et al. v. Thompson, 8 ib. 650.
4. But what she said' about her grandfather having given the slave to her, is not explanatory of the possession, but of the manner in which she acquired' title to the slave, and falls within another rule, well' established by numerous decisions, that declarations of the party in possession, going beyond an explanation of his possession and constituting no part of the res gestae, should be rejected. See the rule exemplified in Nelson v. Iverson, 17 Ala. 216; Hadden’s Ex’rs, v. Powell, ib. 314, and Thompson v. Mawhinney & Smith, ib. 362. This portion of the deposition was properly excluded. — See also, McBride & Wife v. Thompson, supra.
5. The court also properly excluded the conclusion or opinion of the witness as to the posssssion of the slave in controversy. It was the appropriate office of the jury to draw the conclusion as to the fact of possession from the circumstances developed in evidence and upon which the witness predicated his opinion. The law does not permit that the witness should be put in the place of the jury to draw conclusions for them. — Herrick v. Lapham, 10 Johns. 281; Donnell v. Jones, 13 Ala. 490, 511; 2 Phil. Ev., C. & H. note 759, et seq.
6. In respect to the declarations of Mrs. Graham, the wife of *826¡the defendant, it is only necessary to observe, that ordinarily the admissions or declarations of the wife wil] only-bind the husband in cases where she has authority to make them, as in cases' of agency, (1 Greenl. Ev., ^ 185; 2 Phil. Ev., C. & H. notes, p. 152, note 160,) and that in this case, it doe.s not appear the husband had delegated to .the wife any such authority. On the contrary, .we, may well conclude that the husband and wife were living together and the declarations, were made by the latter 'while exercising that control o,ver the .domestics which..usually devolves, upon (mr. .-Such control ¡and possession do not make her declarations.evidence against.her husband, in regard to the title to such property, as that it .belonged,not to her, but to the wife of the plaintiff.
7. The only remaining question, which it js.mecpssary for us to consider, is, shouldjPerry, the husband, in consideration of the' marriage with Frances .McKewall, be. deemed a purchaser in the contemplation of that clause in. the.statute..of frauds which declares, that “when any loan ,of .goods and chattels shall be pretended to have hpen.made .to any .pers,on,, with whom,,,or those claiming under them, possession shall .have, remained by the space of three years,without demand made and pursued,.by due course of law, on the part of the pretended lender, &c., the same shall betaken as,tp the creditors and purchasers of-the person aforesaid so remaining in possession, to be fraudulent within this act, and the absojule property is with the possession, unless such loan, &c., be declared by will or deed in writing, proved, and recorded,” &c. — Clay’s Dig. § 2, p. 255.
■ We readily concede that marriage is a valuable consideration to support a contract, and that it may be deemed as much more valuable than money, as it more permanently affects the happiness and prosperity of the parlies, and imposes dudes and obligations from which there is no escaping; and had Mrs. Perry before her marriage entered in{p a settlement or anti-nuptial contract, disposing of the.slave jn..question, we are not prepared to aay,. the husband, who should claim under such.contract in consideration of the marriage, would not be regarded as a purchaser íor a valuable consideration within the contemplation of the act. But it is improper that we should decide that question novv, asjt’does not arise. In this case, there was no contract or. agreement whatever in.regard to this slave — nothing to sho.w .that the *827husband was in the least induced to contract the marriage under the belief that this slave belonged to his intended wife; so that the question is simply whether the marriage constitutes him a purchaser, in the meaning of the statute, of property held by-his wife under a pretended loan for three years without demand, &c., on the part of the lender.
Marriage, say the law writers, is a gift of the wife’s personal chattels in possession to the husband. — Co. Lit. 351 b; Clancy’s Hus. & Wife, 2. The law, as an incident to the marriage, vests such property in the husband, and it cannot be said to pass to him by virtue of a sale from the wife in consideration of the marriage. True, in the strict technical sense, he may be said to be a purchaser, or to come to the wife’s property by purchase, us in that sense every estate is by purchase, unless it be by descent. But it is very clear that this is not the sense in which the Legislature used the term, “ purchaser,” in this act, otherwise, it would include an estate by gift, escheat, and the like, which would fall within the technical meaning of the term. The rule of construction requires, that words, in an act of the Legislature which do not relate to a technical subject, should be understood in their popular sense.— 9 Bacon’s Abr., (Bouv. edit.,) 238; Macy v. Raymond, 9 Pick. 285; King v. Pease, 4 B. & Adol. 30; S. C., 24 Eng. C. L. Rep. 17. Thus construed, it is very clear the Legislature meant by the term, purchaser, one who acquires the property by bargain and sale for a valuable consideration. — See Tom!. Law. Die. Tit. “ Purchase.”
The view here taken does not in the least conflict with the numerous cases, which hold that an intervening marriage may operate ex post facto to validate a previous voluntary conveyance to the wife, even as against creditors or subsequent purchasers from the grantor, if the marriage be bona fide and there be no actual intention to defraud. In the case before us, there is no previous agreement upon which the consideration of marriage can attach, so as to make it valid. The simple question is, whether the marriage so operates, as under the statute to vest the absolute property in the husband, by reason of the three years previous permissive possession of the wife. We are clear that it does-not, and that the husband acquired no greater interest than the-wife had at time of the marriage.,
The other points raised by the charges asked and those given by *828the court are substantially covered by the views above expressed, and we conclude the court did not err in refusing the charges asked and in giving those excepted'to. But for the errors previously noticed, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.