Corbin v. Jackson ex dem. Garnsey

14 Wend. 619
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 14 Wend. 619 (Corbin v. Jackson ex dem. Garnsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corbin v. Jackson ex dem. Garnsey, 14 Wend. 619 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1835).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered:

By the Chancellor.

The right of the lessors of the plaintiff in the court below to recover the premises in question in this cause, the south half of lot No. 80, in Treat and Morris’ patent, depends upon the validity of the deed of September, 1792, to Le Fevre and wife and Madame D’Autremont. This deed is for 600 acres of land, and purports to be executed by Treat and Morris, under whom both parties claim title, by Charles Felix Bue De Bouloigne, their attorney. It was duly acknowledged and recorded as early as 1796. It recites the granting of a patent to Treat and Morris, in 1787, for 15,360 acres of land in Green Township; the execution of a power of attorney from them to Charles Felix Bue De Bouloigne, in 1791, authorizing him to sell and convey the lands; the execution of a contract of sale by him, as such attorney, to Le Fevre and wife and Madame D’Autremont, for 600 acres, which contract was annexed to the deed, and conveys to the grantees in fee the 600 acres, parcel of the 15,360 acres, to be surveyed and taken according to, and in pursuance of such contract of sale.

The first objection to the validity of this deed, urged by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, is, that there was no legal evidence on the trial of the existence and due execution of the power of attorney recited in the deed. To establish the fact that such power had been executed by Treat and Morris, the lessors of the plaintiff gave in evidence the declarations of Morris, under whom the defendant subsequently derived his claim of title. These declarations or admisions were made about the year 1801, while Morris himself was the sole owner of the premises in controversy, if the power had not been executed so as to vest the title in Madame A’Autremont, under the deed. It was also proved that both of the subscribing witnesses mentioned in the agreement annexed to the deed as [623]*623having attested the execution of the power were deed. These admissions of Morris, if they were legal evidence against the defendant, established the fact of the execution of the power, and that it was given up and cancelled or destroyed, when Treat and Morris executed a conveyance to Bouloigne, about the year 1795. And if the power is proved, or is presumed to be destroyed or lost, or if it was placed beyond the power or control of the lessors of the plaintiff, I agree with the chief justice, who delivered the opinion of the supreme court, that these declarations or admissions of Morris are good secondary evidence of its original existence and contents; not only against Morris himself, but also against others, who have derived their claim of title under him since such declarations and admissions were made, whilst Morris was claiming to be the owner of the land. In 1801, it is perfectly clear that the grantees of Madame D’Autremont might have filed a bill of discovery against him, for the purpose of obtaining a compulsory admission of the fact that such a power had been executed, and-that it had been surrendered up or destroyed subsequent to the execution of the deed; and his answer thus obtained would have been legal evidence against him and those subsequently claiming under him, to estalish these facts in any future litigation. Lady Dartmouth v. Roberts, 2 Eagle & Young, 655. And if the same discovery or admission was then made by him voluntarily, it must have the same legal effect, both as to him and as to those who are his privies in estate, either by descent or conveyance. It makes no difference in this case that Morris was himself alive, and might have been examined as a witness. That question has been recently examined and decided by the supreme of court of Pennsylvania, in the case of Gibblehouse v. Strong, 3 Rawle’s R. 437, where all the authorities on the subject were most elaborately examined ; and it would be impossible for me to add any thing to the powerful and conclusive reasoning of Mr. Justice Kennedy on the point now under consideration. Suffice it to say, that the decision of Chief Justice Savage on this quesion is fully sustained. This is not' one of those cases where it is attempted to introduce parol evidence of the declaration of a party to destroy a written title to land, contrary to the provis[624]*624ions of the statute of frauds; but it is merely showing, by the a(jmjssions 0f the party in whom the title would otherwise have been vested, at the time of such admissions, that his title had previously been divested under a valid power executed in due form, according to the requirements of that statute, but which power has been subsequently lost or destroyed, or is placed beyond the reach of our courts of justice. The declarations of Morris would not have been conclusive evidence, even against himself; and therefore it was in the power of the defendant to have called him for the purpose of showing that no power of attorney had in fact been executed by himself and Treat, if such was in fact the case. But when we find him admitting that such a power had been given, in his private conferences with the agent of Treat’s heirs, and at the same time urging the concealment of the fact for the purpose of defrauding of their title those who had purchased and paid for their land under that power, it would be going too far to say the lessors of the plaintiff should be compelled to call him as a witness, and trust to his honesty on oath; thereby precluding themselves from the possibility of discrediting him, or of impeaching his testimony.

But it is said there was sufficient to raise a presumption that the power itself was in existence, at Gabion’s, in Paris, where the contract of purchase was executed in 1792. The agreement annexed to the deed contained the copy of a French translation of the power said to have been deposited with the original at Gabion’s, the year previous ; and there can be very little doubt that the power translated by L’Abbe De Francois, in October, 1791, was the same which was referred to in the admissions of Morris, as having been executed by himself and Treat, as he probably was aware of the existence of the French copy annexed to the deed, which was then on record. But although it was in the hands of Gabion forty years before the trial, the fair presumption would be that it was taken again by Bouloigne, when he returned to this country; as it embraced the whole of the lands of Treat and Morris in the patent, as well as the 600 acres sold to Le Fevre and D’Autremont. That supposition also corresponds with the declarations of Morris, as to its being given up and cancelled or de[625]*625stroyed. No evidence has been given to show that by the laws of France an instrument once deposited with a notary must remain in his office as a record 5 but even if that was admitted, it would only prove that no better evidence than Morris’ admissions of the execution of the power could be obtained, as no witnesses who were acquainted with the handwriting of Hughes and Thompson, the witnesses to the power, or of Treat and Morris, forty years since, could be found in France to prove the execution of the power under a commission, and the court had no power to send witnesses there to be examined, to prove its execution. Besides, the contents of the paper deposited there were already in evidence in the official copy annexed to the deed.

The title to the undivided 600 acres passed immediately to the grantees under the deed, with the right to elect in which part of the tract it should be located, as soon as the patent was allotted.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Wend. 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbin-v-jackson-ex-dem-garnsey-nycterr-1835.