By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
[1.] We think the presiding Judge erred in admitting against Wiley Pool and his wife, the sayings of James and Nancy Allen, uttered at any time, except at the division of the negroes. What they said at that time, or what any body else said then, was part of the res gestee, and would be admissible as such. But what they said either before or after-wards, is, as to Pool and wife, mere hearsay. True, they were life-tenants, and Pool and wife were remainder in the same negroes, but they were not pi'ivies with Pool and wife, and therefore their admissions are not evidence against Pool and wife. The rule is, that admissions are evidence against the parties who make them and their privies. This evidence was- admitted upon the idea that Pool and wife were privies
[2.] We think there was error also, in refusing to allow Pool to amend his bill, by striking his name as complainant and inserting it as defendant. The amendment.Act of 1853 and 1854, is surely broad enough to include this case.
[3.] We think there was also error in the charge, that when Pool and Morris, the husbands of the two women entitled in remainder, and young Allen, the other remainderman, bought out the life estate of Nancy Allen, that life estate Became merged in the remainder. Before a merger of one estate into another can take place, both estates must be owned, not only by the same person, but in the same right. ,Iiere Pool and Morris owned the life estate of Nancy Allen in their own right, for they bought it, but they owned the remainders of their wives in right of their wives. ■
But we consider both of the last mentioned errors to be very immaterial in the view we take of this case. The proposed amendment aimed to abandon Pool’s claim for a new division of the negroes, and to rely solely on the wife’s equity, while we think that in any one of the state of facts claimed as existing in this case, the wife’s equity is gone, and the only case which the complainants can maintain is Pool’s claim for the new division. Hence also, the question of merger, is immaterial, for it apples only to the wife’s equity, which we think is effectually controlled by other principles. If there has been no division, the wife's equity is gone, for the life-tenant, Mrs. Allen, is confessedly dead, and all of the negroes were in the possession of Pool and Morris, a part in Pool’s and a part in Morris’s possession, before this bill was brought. But Pool and Morris, in right of their wives, are joint tenants of the remainder, and the possession of one joint tenant is the possession of all. The negroes in
[4.] The only remaining question is one on which the whole case turns. We think it was error in the Judge to refuse to charge as requested by complainant, that the division which was made by Pool and Morris and young Allen, in the lifetime of Mrs. Allen, must be presumed to have included only the life estate which they had the power to divide with completeness and finality at that time, and not the remainder which they had no power so to divide before the death of Mrs. Allen. The division was of course meant to be a complete one of whatever was divided, unless the contrary appears. The life estate could have been completely divided at that time, nothing else being necessary to ren der it perfect, but the remainder could not have been so divided at that time, for that division could not be compleG till the death of Mrs. Allen, since up to that event, either c the wives could have disturbed it, by asserting her equity. It is a rational presumption, that men intend to do tha t which they have a right and power to do, rather than whe ¡
These principles dispose of all the questions raised by the bill of exceptions.
Judgment reversed.