Applegate v. Lexington & Carter County Mining Co.

117 U.S. 255, 6 S. Ct. 742, 29 L. Ed. 892, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1834
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 15, 1886
Docket140
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 117 U.S. 255 (Applegate v. Lexington & Carter County Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Applegate v. Lexington & Carter County Mining Co., 117 U.S. 255, 6 S. Ct. 742, 29 L. Ed. 892, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1834 (1886).

Opinion

Me. Justice Woods

delivered the opinion of th e court. After stating the case as above reported, he continued:

. We shall first consider the exclusion1 of the original deed from Fleming and the Bernards to John Bryan, and the original deed from John Bryan to Samuel Sackett. We are of opinion that they should .have been admitted in evidence. They have been certified to and inspected by this court. Their appearance affords strong evidence of their genuineness and antiquity, and they are free from any badge that would excite suspicion of fraud or forgery.' In support t>f their genuineness it was shown that a short time before the trial in the Circuit Court they were discovered by one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys *261 in the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Greenup County, Kentucky, among the original papers of a suit in that court. brought by one James Hughes v. The Heirs of Thomas Shore, on July 15, 1816, to quiet his title to sixteen thousand acres of land in Greenup County, part of the lands conveyed by the deed of "William Fleming and the Bernards to John Bryan. The deeds and the original papers in that suit were produced by a clerk of the Greenup Circuit Court in obedience to a subpoena duces tecum. The record of this case was' admissible against persons not parties or privies, to prove the 'collateral fact of the antiquity of the original deeds offered in evidence and to account for their custody. Barr v. Gratz, 4 Wheat. 213, 220.

The bill of Hughes averred that he derived title under the patent to Charles Fleming, and by virtue of the devise in his will to William Fleming and the Bernards, and the deeds of William. Fleming and the Bernards to John Bryan, and of John Bryan to Samuel Sackett. The complainant Hughes offered by his bill “ to produce said patent and deeds showing the deduction of title in proper time, or whenever the court should require it.” The two deeds mentioned in the bill of complaint -filed by Hughes correspond with and appear to be the two original deeds, namely, the deed from William Fleming and the Bernards to John Bryan, and the deed from John Bryan to Samuel Sackett, offered in evidence by the plaintiffs in this case, which wTere found 'among the other papers in the case of Hughes v. The Heirs of Shore. These deeds were necessary exhibits and evidence in the case to entitle Hughes to the relief prayed for. They were produced from the files of the highest court of the county where the lands were situate, from the custody of an' officer charged by law with their care and safe-keeping, where they had been placed for a necessary and proper use, and from which they could not be withdrawn without the order and consent of the court. Their custody was, therefore, accounted for, and was shown to be proper and beyond suspicion.

It further appeared that upon the trial of the case of Hughes v. Shore's Heirs, on July 8, 1825, the patent to Charles Fleming from the Commonwealth of Yirginia for 16,191 acres of *262 land, the will of Charles Fleming and the said deed of William Fleming and the' Bernards, trustees, to John Bryan, were offered in evidence. The latter was rejected “ because,” as the bill of exception states, “ the certificate and seal of the mayor of Philadelphia ” was “ not sufficient to authorize it to be read, and because the same could not be read as a recorded deed, not having been recorded within the time prescribed by law.” And “ because by rejecting this deed complainants’ claim of title was broken and' they could not further progress with their evidence, the court rendered a decree dismissing their bill.” It is, therefore, made clear by the evidence offered that at least as early as the year 1825 the deed of William Fleming and the Ber-nards to John Bryan was on file in the Circuit Court of Green-up County, and it may be safely inferred that the other documents mentioned by Hughes as his muniments of title were also on file in the same court at the same time, and that all the deeds remained in the custody of the court down to the time when they were produced by the clerk under the subpoena duces tecum issued in this case, 'a period of fifty-five years.

Another circumstance relied on to show the genuineness of the original deeds was that each bore indorsed thereon a certificate apparently ancient and genuine, one with the signature of the recording officer and the other without signature, to the effect ' that the deeds had been recorded in the year 1816. In the case of Stebbins v. Duncan, 108 U. S. 32, 50, it was held that a certified copy of a memorandum made at the foot of the record of a deed “ recorded June 23d, 1818,” and without signature, was competent and conclusive evidence that the deed had been recorded at the date mentioned. In view, therefore, of the habit of recorders of deeds, which is universal and matter of common knowledge, to indorse upon the deeds themselves the fact and date of their registration, the certificates appearing on the deeds in question were competent and sufficient evidence of the fact that the deeds had been put upon record during the year mentioned in the certificates.

We think this evidence, supported by an inspection of the deeds,'was sufficient to justify their admission as ancient deeds without direct proof of their execution. The rule is that an *263 ancient deed may be admitted in evidence, without direct proof of its execution, if it appears to be of' the age of at' least thirty years,- when it is found in proper custody, and either possession under it is shown, or some other corroborative evidence of its authenticity, freeing it from all just grounds of suspicion. Thus, in Barr v. Gratz, 4 Wheat., above cited, a deed from Craig to Michael Gratz, dated July 16, 1784, was offered in evidence, but was not proved by the subscribing witnesses, nor their absence accounted for. Its admission was alleged as error; but this court said that, as the deed was inore than thirty years-old, and was proved to have been in the possession of the lessors of the plaintiff, and.actually asserted by them as the ground of their title in a prior chancery suit, it was in the language of the books sufficiently accounted for, and on this ground, as well as because it was a part of the evidence in support of the decree in that suit, it was admissible without the regular proof of its execution.

So in Caruthers v. Eldredge, 12 Gratt. 670, it was contended by the plaintiff in error that in no case could a paper be admitted in- evidence as an ancient deed, without proof of its execution, until it was first shown .that thirty years’ quiet and continued possession of the land had been held under the deed. But the court held, in substance, that an ancient deed may be introduced in evidence without proof of its execution, though possession may not have been held for thirty years in accordance therewith, if such account be given of the deed as may be reasonably expected under all the circumstances of the case, and as will afford the presumption that it is genuine.

In Harlan v. Howard, 79 Ky.

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Bluebook (online)
117 U.S. 255, 6 S. Ct. 742, 29 L. Ed. 892, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/applegate-v-lexington-carter-county-mining-co-scotus-1886.