Fisher v. . Webb

84 N.C. 44
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 84 N.C. 44 (Fisher v. . Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. . Webb, 84 N.C. 44 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Ruffin, J.

It is needless to make any statement of the facts of the case as it was intended to present and in fact does present for our consideration the single question whether the court of a justice of the peace can entertain an action on a lost note for a sum less than two hundred dol-. lars, the defendant who is the appellant insisting that such a court being strictly one of law, as distinguished from a court of. equity, no such jurisdiction attaches to it.

It has rarely happened in the history of jurisprudence that any one question has given rise to so many conflicting and contradictory decisions by-courts as this one, touching the competency of courts of law to determine actions based upon lost notes and other evidences of debt, and such conflicts ard not confined to the decisions of different courts, *45 but are very often to be found in those rendered by the same tribunals at different periods, and such is the uncertainty pervading them that it is absolutely impossible to extract from them any general principle or rule.

Seeing then the difficulties in which other courts have become involved by allowing their decisions in regard to the point to fluctuate, we are the more disposed to adhere rigidly to those principles which were enunciated by this court when the question was first presented for its consideration, and-by a recurrence to which its decisions have at all times been kept uniform and consistent.

The first case upon the point was Cotton v. Beasley, 2 Murp., 259, decided in 1813, in which it was determined that a court of law was competent to try such a cause, provided the plaintiff could make proof of the.loss of the instrument sued on, by a disinterested witness, but otherwise not. And the reason .assigned was, that, because of the danger to which the defendant would be exposed in case the plaintiff were allowed to testify to the loss of the instrument, while he himself was excluded from showing its payment, or other defence, by his oath, the law excepted the ease from the general rule which allowed parties, though incompetent on the trial, to prove by their own affidavits the loss of papers as preliminary or auxiliary matters ; and having deprived the plaintiff of this privilege, in order that he might not be remediless, it allowed him- to appeal to a court of equity for its aid. In delivering the opinion of the court as to the competency of the plaintiff at law to prove the loss, Judge Hall recognizes the general rule, and does not hesitate to declare that the plaintiff should have the benefit of it, if without the aid of his own testimony he could get no relief. But he observes “ that in such a case a party has a remedy in the court of equity where he will be at liberty to swear to the loss and the defendant to make any -answer he can upon oath;” and again he says, *46 “it seems not to be right that the plaintiff shall be permitted to become a witness at law and not the defendant. Suppose the plaintiff swears at law that he has lost the bond, the defendant will not be permitted to swear that he has paid it, taken it up and destroyed it; the parties ought to stand on equal grounds. In a court of equity they will both be heard upon oath. The 'plaintiff can require no more than that he may proceed at lato, if he can make out the loss of the bond by disinterested witnesses.”

The point as to the jurisdiction of the law courts was next discussed in the case of Allen v. State Bank, 1 Dev. & Bat. Eq., 3, decided in 1834, where Judge Gaston delivered the opinion of the court. After commenting on the diversities to bo found in many of the decisions and the repugnancies existing in those of the courts of England, and being perhaps more or less influenced thereby, he admits that it was still an unsettled question and declares it to be one of so much consequence that the court should weigh it well in all its bearings and not decide it until it should become néces-sary, by its being the direct point involved in a case — which he held it not to be in the one then under consideration : for however it might be as to the jurisdiction of a court of law there could be no question, he declares, as to the jurisdiction of a court of equity in such case, growing out of its peculiar power to relieve against accident and mistake.

The point was next considered in the case of Fisher v. Carroll, 6 Ired., 485, and from the labor there bestowed upon it and the care to explain why and when the plaintiff was forced to seek the aid of a court of equity and why that aid was given him, and to correct even certain dicta of some of the judges in regard'to it, it is plain to be seen that the court then felt that the time had come when a decision was necessary, and therefore they did what Judge Gaston said should be done, weighed well the point with all its bearings and consequences, so as to reach a safe judgment which *47 might be accepted as its final settlement by the court. Judge Pearson, who wrote the opinion of the court, says that the fact, that equity requires slighter proof of the loss of the instrument is the mam reason to induce the plaintiff to sue in that court, and it is that too which distinguishes its mode of proceeding from that of a court of law, where strict and competent proof of the-loss must be made ; that ordinarily, the loss of a deed or other paper may be proved in a court of law by the oath of a party so as to let in secondary evidence of its execution and contents, “ and the only reason why the same principle is not followed in those courts in reference to lost notes is the want of power to require an indemnity as a condition to the judgment,” and he expressly declares that “if the party can prove the loss, it is better for him to sue at law.” .And it is clear that he means it to be better not merely for the party to the action, but for the court and the country ; for he adds that the mode of trying facts at law by the examination of the witnesses in the presence of a jury is preferable to the mode of trial in a court of equity, particularly when the very defective manner of taking depositions is considered.”

The only subsequent case in which the court has recurred to the point is that of Chancy v. Baldwin, 1 Jones, 78. This was an action on a lost note begun by a warrant before a justice of the peace and taken by appeal to the superior court, where on the trial the plaintiff offered to prove by his own oath the loss of the instrument which was admitted to be a negotiable one, and being rejected as incompetent appealed to this court. The competency of the party to testify was the only point presented in the ease and Judge Pearson, who again delivered the opinion of the court, discussed it at considerable length and after calling attention to the hazard to which the defendant might be exposed in case the note should be afterwards found in the hands of an endorsee-declares, “ that no defendant should be put in such a pre *48 dicament upon the mere oath of a plaintiffand therefore it was held that the party was properly excluded as a witness.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.C. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-webb-nc-1881.