Dunbar v. Marden

13 N.H. 311
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 N.H. 311 (Dunbar v. Marden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunbar v. Marden, 13 N.H. 311 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

Woods, J.

It is mado a question in this case whether the evidence offered and admitted at the trial, was competent to prove the execution of the note in question.

The general rule is, that the best evidence must be produced which the nature of the case can admit, and which is in the power of the party. In consequence of that rule, the testimony of the subscribing witness must bo had, if he can be produced and he be capable of examination. But if the testimony of the subscribing witness cannot be had, the next best evidence is proof of his hand writing, and is admissible. Was the evidence offered in this case of the character required by that rule ?

It is insisted, in argument, that Farnsworth vs. Briggs, 6 N. H. R. 561, and Webster vs. Quimby, 8 Ditto 382, are authorities that the mere fact that the subscribing witness was without the limits of the state, was not sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to introduce evidence of the hand writing of the witness, and of the subscriber ; that in order to let in such evidence, the witness must be shown to be without the limits of the United States. In Farnsworth vs. Briggs the witness was out of this state, and that is all that the case finds. But he was, in fact, at the time in the state of Maine. Such was the proof at the trial of the cause; and in delivering his opinion, Richardson, C. J., in reference to the facts reported in that case, says, that when there are subscribing witnesses to an instrument, they must be called to prove it. <! But if the subscribing witness cannot be produced, the invariablé practice has been, in this state and in other places, to prove the hand writing of the witness.” And in the same case, Parker, J., says, “ the rule, that when the testimony of the subscribing witness cannot be had, the proper proof of the execution is by giving evidence of his hand writing, seems to have been repeatedly sanctioned.” By the language thus used, and in reference to the facts of that case, if the point can be regarded as being raised and considered at all, it clearly appears that it was then considered that “ the witness [314]*314cannot be produced” and “ cannot be had,” within the meaning of the rule admitting proof of the hand writing of the subscribing witness in such cases, when the witness is out of the limits of the state. If that case can be considered as an authority upon the question at all, it certainly, at all events, does not sustain the defendant’s views. However, the pointr of the decision in that case was, that when the subscribing witness is out of the state, proof of the signature of the subscriber of a note is not competent proof of its execution, without proof also of the signature of the witness. And the case of Webster vs. Gfuimby, cited at the argument, only recognizes the well settled doctrine, that when the execution of an instrument is witnessed, and the witness is not produced, and his absence is not accounted for, other proof of the execution of the instrument is inadmissible.

And it may safely be said, we think, that the doctrine of neither of those cases militates with the ruling of the judge at the trial. And, indeed, it is conceived that the reason which lies at the foundation of the well established rule of evidence, which admits of the introduction of evidence of the hand writing of the subscribing witness, and of the subscriber, in proof of the execution of an instrument, where there is a subscribing witness who is in a foreign country, applies with equal force in the case of the absence of the witness in another of the states of this Union. That reason is, that the process of the court cannot reach the witness effectively, in a foreign government or country, and, consequently, it is not in the power of the party, legally speaking, to produce him. And the process of a court of this state is no more operative upon a witness, being or sojourning in the state of Maine, to compel his attendance as a witness, than if the witness were a resident in Canada, or in China.

And he can no more be produced, or be had at court, within the sense of the rule of law dispensing with his production, and admitting other evidence when the witness cannot fee produced, in the one case than in the other. And it is [315]*315believed to be the well established general rule of law on this subject, that proof of the hand writing of the witness may be given, in all cases, when from physical or legal causes it is not in the power of the party to produce the witness at the trial.

And, moreover, we believe it is also well settled, that when the witness is without the jurisdiction of the court, so as not to be answerable to its process, that fact constitutes the case of a legal inability, within the principle of the general rule on the subject, and excuses from the necessity of the production of the witness himself, and lets in the secondary evidence of his hand writing. In the case of Homer vs. Wallis, 11 Mass. 11. 309, the precise point under consideration was decided. The subscribing witness to a note was absent, in the state of New-York, and his place of residence specified and known. To prove the execution of the note, the hand writing of the subscriber was permitted to be proved. It was objected, that the witness should have been produced. Parker, C. J., who delivered the opinion of the court, said, “it appearing, from the report of the case, that this person was absent, and out of the commonwealth, we think it was right to suffer the cause to be tried upon other evidence.”

In Cook vs. Husted, 12 Johns. R. 188, it was held, that when, upon a trial in a justice’s court, it appeared that the subscribing witness to a bill of sale resided neither in the county in which the case was tried, nor in the adjoining counties, it was sufficient, in proof of the execution of the bill, to prove the hand writing of the subscriber. The evidence was holden to be competent, for the reason of “ the absence of the witness beyond the control of a subpoena from the justice.” In that case, the residence of the witness was known.

In Adam vs. Kerr, 1 B. & P. 360, Buller, J., stated the rule to be, that when the subscribing witness is beyond the reach of the process of the court at the time of the trial, the evidence of his hand writing should be admitted.

[316]*316So in Prince vs. Blackburn, 2 East 250, the court said, as the witness was out of the jurisdiction of the court, so as not to be answerable to its process, the secondary evidence was properly admitted.”

So, also, the rule admitting evidence of the hand writing of a subscribing witness, where the witness resides beyond the jurisdiction of the court, was recognized and applied in the case of Hodnett vs. Forman, 1 Stark. N. P. C. 72. See, also, Ward vs. Wills, 1 Taunt. 161.

Mr. Justice Parkis reported to have said, in delivering the judgment of the court upon a question of this sort: Formerly, proof of the hand writing of an attesting witness was only admissible when such witness was dead; and I can remember the first deviation from that rule, when it was extended to cases where the party was abroad, or out of the jurisdiction of the court of this country.” Pytt vs. Griffith, 6 J. B. Moore 538.

We are clearly of the opinion that the fact that the place of residence, or sojourn, of the subscribing witness, is known to.

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Related

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28 N.H. 386 (Superior Court of New Hampshire, 1854)

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.H. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbar-v-marden-nhsuperct-1842.