Booth v. Tiernan

109 U.S. 205, 3 S. Ct. 122, 27 L. Ed. 907, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 959
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 12, 1883
Docket95
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 109 U.S. 205 (Booth v. Tiernan) 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
Booth v. Tiernan, 109 U.S. 205, 3 S. Ct. 122, 27 L. Ed. 907, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 959 (1883).

Opinion

•Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

*206 This was an action of ejectment brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiffs in error to recover the title and- possession of a tract of land in Grundy County, Illinois, described as the northeast quarter of section twenty-nine (29), in township thirty-two (32) north of the base line, and in range eight (8) east of the third principal meridian.

By stipulation the intervention of a jury was waived by the parties, and the cause was submitted upon the evidence to the circuit court.

One of the defences relied .on was the statute of limitations of Illinois, being sec. 4, chap. 83, of the Revised Statutes of that State, providing that possession for seven years, by actual residence thereon by any person having a connected title in law or equity, deducible of record from the State or the United'States, &c., should be a bar to an action brought for the recovery of lands, &c.

Evidence was introduced-on the part of the defendant below, the ancestor of the plaintiffs in error, tending to prove, as was claimed, that he had possessed the premises in controversy, by actual residence, for seven years next preceding the commencement of the action; but the; finding of the court was that he had not been possessed, by actual residence thereon, of the land in controversy for that period.

This finding, although excepted to and alleged as error, is a conclusion of fact which we cannot review. No exceptions appear on the record to the rulings of the court upon any questions relating to the evidence upon t!his point, and it cannot be claimed that the evidence, as stated in the bill of exceptions, was not legally sufficient to justify the conclusion reached by the court. No error in law can, therefore, be predicated of this conclusion of fact.

On the trial it was admitted that Ibzan Lacey, the common source of title, derived title to the premises in controversy from the United States, in 1839, and a power of attorney from Lacey and Avife dated April 20th, Í839, to Joel "Wicks, authorizing him to sell and convey the premises, was proved. It was further admitted that an original deed from Lacey and wife by Wicks, their attorney in fact, to Alva Newman, dated May 6th, 1840, *207 had been lost, and it was proved that it was not in the power of the plaintiff to produce it, and that it had not been intentionally destroyed or disposed of for the purpose of introducing a copy thereof in place of the original.

The plaintiff below then offered in evidence a certified copy from the proper recorder’s office of the record of said original deed, which, however, described the land conveyed as the southeast quarter of section. 29, &c., instead the northeast quarter of that section; but counsel for the plaintiff stated in connection with the offer that there would be offered other evidence tending to show that there was a clerical error in the description of the land as entered upon the record and contained in the copy, and that it should be the northeast instead of the southeast quarter of the section.

To tlie introduction of this certified copy objection was made, because it did not describe the land in .controversy, and because no evidence was admissible to prove and correct any alleged mistake.

The ground of this objection is stated to be that the statute of Illinois (Laws 1861, p. 174, § !)• in force at the time, authorizing the record of a deed or a certified transcript from the record, to be used as evidence óñ a trial in place of a lost.original, provided that it might be read in evidence with like effect as though the original of such a deed, conveyance, or other writing was produced and read in evidence,” and that as in .this case, if the original had been produced, no evidence would be admitted to prove and correct the alleged mistake in the description of the premises conveyed, none can be admitted to prove and correct such a mistake in the record or transcript.

The court overruled the objection and admitted the certified copy of the deed in evidence, reserving the question upon the subsequent evidence to be offered, for the purpose of proving and correcting the alleged mistake. Such evidence was, in the further progress of the trial, admitted, on which, as a conclusion of fact, the court found that the land actually described in the lost deed was that in controversy; and -thereon judgment was given for the plaintiff below. Exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court admitting the evidence subsequently offered *208 as to the mistake in the description, upon the ground of its competency, whiqh will be hereafter considered. The general question raised by the exception to the introduction'of the certified copy-from the record, is whether evidence of any description .is admissible for such a purpose.

The ruling of the circuit court on this point was correct. The language of the statute was intended merely to declare that the record of a déed, of á transcript from the record, though a copy only, and therefore in its nature merely secondary evidence, should nevertheless have the same effect, when competent as evidence at - all, as the original itself, if it had been produced, upon the determination of the issues to be tried. It was not intended to declare that the record or a copy from it should, in law, be an original instrument for all purposes. The presumption is, that, as public officers generally perform their prescribed duties accurately, the record, and all certified transcripts from it, will be true copies of the original; but they are hone the less copies on that account,- and are made evidence only in lieu of the original, and on the grounds on which secondary evidence is permitted to be given. And there is nothing in the statute, either expressed or implied, which forbids the party from showing, by extrinsic proof, otherwise-. legitimate, what the contents of the lost original really were, where it is shown that the record itself, or a copy from it, is not a true copy. By the very terms of the statute, the record of a deed is not original-evidence, for it can be used only on proof of the loss of the original deed, or that the latter cannot be produced by the party offering the proof; and the object of the statute evidently was to require recording, in the first place, as notice to subsequent purchasers, and in the second, fo supply a convenient statutory mode and instrument of secondary evidence. Its whole effect can be accomplished, without in any manner uisplacing or superseding the common-law- principles which authorized other modes of proving the contents of lost deeds and other instruments. It1 is in this light that the statute has Been viewed and treated by the Supreme Court of Illinois. Bowman v. Wettig, 89 Ill. 416. In Nattinger v. Ware, 41 Ill. 245, it was decided that a deed, properly executed,, and *209 acknowledged, but recorded with a misdescription of the premisés, would protect the grantee against subsequent purchasers and encumbrancers.

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Bluebook (online)
109 U.S. 205, 3 S. Ct. 122, 27 L. Ed. 907, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booth-v-tiernan-scotus-1883.