Bell v. Kendrick

25 Fla. 778
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 25 Fla. 778 (Bell v. Kendrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Kendrick, 25 Fla. 778 (Fla. 1889).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.:

Appellee sued appellants in ejectment to recover possession of the NEJof the NWJ of section 22, T. 24, S., R. 21, E., iuHernando county, and mesne profits, and the defendants pleaded not guilty.

The case was tried before a referee.

After testifying to having had a deed of conveyance of the [782]*782land from the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of this State, and as to the loss of the same, and introduced another witness who testified on the same points, and also put in evidence a certificate of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of that county of the redemption made by him on February 24th, 1887, of the land from a tax sale of the same made by the Collector of Revenue on the seventh day of June, 1886, he offered in evidence a certified copy of the following paper on file in the State Land Cfifiee in Tallahassee :

Register’s Office, Tallahassee, May 8,1854.

No. 852.

I hereby certify that W. J. Turner, of the county of Hernando, State of Florida, has this day paid me in cash the sum of $59.01, and has executed and delivered to me his three bonds of this date, one for the sum of $56.01, due one year after date; one for the sum of $53.01, due two years from date; one for the sum of $50.01, due three years from date ; said cash and bonds being for the purchase of the following lands belonging to the Internal Improvement Fund, to-wit: The E-J of SWJ, sec. 15 ; of NEJ and NEJ ofNWi, section 22, T. 24, R. 21, South and East, containing 160J acres, at $1.25 per acre.

Title to said laud is not to be made until the whole of the purchase money shall have been paid. This certificate may be assigned, but if the said purchaser or his assignee shall fail to pay either of the installments or interets for sixty days after it falls due he will forfeit whatever shall have been paid, and his claim to the land, according to sec. 5, No. 23, acts of 1846.

D. S. Walker,

Per J. H. Gatlin,

Register of Publie Lands for the 8tate ot Florida.

Among other endorsements at the foot of this paper is a statement of the amount of the cash payment and of each of [783]*783the three bonds, and the aggregate thereof. On its back is the following assignment, viz :

“Eor value received I transfer the within to Wm. H. Kendrick, September 10th, 1855.

“ W. J. Turner.”

Upon the statements of the amounts is endorsed : “ Paid September 7th, 1859,” and immediately below it the following : “ Deed to Wm. IT. Kendrick November 23,1859,” and a similar endorsement of transfer is to be found on the back of the paper.

He also offered in evidence a certified transcript from the Kecord Book of entries of land sales in the State Land Office, of the sale of the above land showing that they were entered by Turner on May 8th, 1854, the date of the above certificate, and giving its number, and stating the name of Wm. H. Kendrick as the person to whom the deed was made, and November 23rd, 1859, as its date, the place for the entry as to “ when recorded, volume and page,” being blank.

The defendants objected to the admission of these copies in evidence “ on the ground of in competency, and as-not being the best evidence of the facts intended to be proven thereby,” but the objection was overruled and the copies admitted to the extent of proving that a deed once existed, or was issued to W. H. Kendrick, covering the lands in controversy.

The assignment of error is, that the court erred in admiting as evidence a certificate that a deed had been made when there was no deed produced, and counsel for appellants asserts in his brief that a certificate that a deed has been made is no evidence in an action of ejectment, but the deed itself must be produced, or a certified copy after it is shown that the deed has been lost.

It is not contended that there had not been sufficient [784]*784proof of fclie loss of the deed to admit secondary evidence of its execution and contents. A certified copy of the deed 'was not obtainable, because the testimony shows that the original liad never been recorded. Of course the above copies of the contract of sale, and of the transcript from the Tract Rook in the State Land Office, were not offered as the best evidence in the sense that the original deed is the best evidence. Greeuleaf on Evidence, sections 34, 582. If counsel is to be understood as meaning that certified copy of a deed is the only legal secondary evidence of the execution or contents of a lost deed, it is sufficient to remark that the authorities all refute such a theory.

Again, it is to be observed, there is no basis for the argument that a certificate that a deed has been made ” is no evidence in an action of ejectment. There jis no such certificate before ns. There was one of this character in the case of Groover vs. Coffee, 19 Fla., 61, where the Commissioner of Lands and Immigration had certified that the records of his office “ showed that fractional section *** was sold to McCall and Stripling on the second day of September, A. D. 1857,” and this court rejected it as not one recognized as evidence uuder the statutes or otherwise ; and remarking : It is not a certificate of ownership by the State, or the Trustees (of the Internal Improvement Fund), nor is it a deed, agreement or contract, or a copy of any document or record pertaining to the office of the Commissioner, within the meaning of the statutes, and that it found no law making it evidence. 1 Greeuleaf, Sec. 484, n. 7.

What we have before us are certified copies of a contract on file in the State Land Office, and of a record of that office. An inspection of these papers discloses that the former is the contract for sale, and the latter the record entry as to such sale and its consummation by a conveyance to Kendrick. "They connect themselves with each other, [785]*785and though the endorsement on the former, or the issue of the deed to Kendrick, may not he of itself evidence of such issue, (a question which we do not now decide,) yet we are satisfied that the record entry is leg-tl secondary evidence of the fact of a conveyance to Kendrick. This record purports to be what in fact it is, a record entry kept in the State Land Office of the successive steps in the sale and conveyance of the State lands. During the period covered by these entries the Register of State Lands was the officer having charge of that office, and the office has during subsequent changes in the name of the officer having charge, remained, arid is now the office of the proper custody ot such records as well as of the sale and management of the public lands.

Official registersor bookskept by persons in public office in which they are required, whether by statute or by the nature of the office, to writedown particular transactions occurring in the course of their public duties and under their personal observation, are generally, admissible in evidence, notwithstanding their authenticity is not confirmed by the ordinary test of truth, the obligation of an oath, andan opportunity to cross-examine the person on whose authority the truth of the document depends. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sections 483, 484. It is not necessary to the admissibility in evidence of an official register of this kind that a statute should expressly require it to be kept, or that the nature of the office should render it indispensable. Ib.. 496.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Fla. 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-kendrick-fla-1889.