Graham v. Whitely

26 N.J.L. 254
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 N.J.L. 254 (Graham v. Whitely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Whitely, 26 N.J.L. 254 (N.J. 1857).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

The Chief Justice.

The first error relied upon is, that testimony taken under a commission was admitted in evidence on the trial, though objected to on the ground that the interrogatories were neither signed by the party or counsel. The statute authorizing commissions and" the taking of depositions (Nix. Pig. 884, § 1,) requires that the inleregatories for the examination of the witness shall be signed by the parties, or their counsel in the cause, or such of them as shall request the said commission. It has been uniformly held that the statutes of this state authorizing testimony to be taken before commissioners, to be used upon the trial of a cause, were in derogation of the common law, and must be strictly pursued. Middleton v. Taylor, Coxe 445; Arnold v. Renshaw, 6 Halst. 317.

In Ludlam v. Broderick, 3 Green 270, it was held that if the interrogatories were signed by the attorney of the plaintiff, at whose request the commission was issued, the requirement of the statute was satisfied. In the present case, it is admitted that the interrogatories were signed by neither of the parties, their counsel or attorneys. The court cannot disregard the plain requirement of the statute. In the language of the court in Ludlam v. Broderick, [258]*258“so far as the legislature has thrown guards and restrictions around the proceeding, we must observe them, and neither break down the one nor overleap the other.” The evidence was incompetent.

The second error assigned is, that the court, upon the trial, admitted in evidence, as a link in the plaintiff’s chain of title, a copy of the will ■ of William Banks, deceased, late of the city of Néw York. The will had been admitted to probate, and recorded in the surrogate’s office of the city of New York. The copy offered in evidence was an exemplification of the record in the surrogate’s office, máde in conformity to the act of congress of March 27th, 1804. It was also proved, by parol evidence, to be an exact copy of the record. The admissibility of the evidence is in nowise affected by the parol proof of its being a copy of the record. The foreign record itself would not have been evidence, and a sworn copy was equally incompetent. Nor can the question be at all affected by the sufficiency or insufficiency of the proof touching the loss of the original will. That would have been a material question, if a copy of the original instrument had been offered, instead of the original will itself. But the question here turns exclusively upon the competency of the exemplification under the act of congress as an instrument of title. It is admitted that the exemplification was admissible in evidence to the extent indicated in the act of congress, viz., that it must have such faith and credit given to it, as it has by law or usage in the courts or offices of the State of New York. But the question still remains, conceding to the exemplification such faith and credit, was it: competent evidence to pass title to real estate in New Jersey? That must depend upon the laws of this state.

By the act of 1713-14, [Nix. Dig. 879, § 2,) it is enacted that all wills executed as therein specified, and regularly proved and entered upon the books of records or registered in the secretary’s office of this province, or any other proper office for that purpose, shall be sufficient to devise real estate within [259]*259this province; and the books in which they are registered may be given in evidence, and shall be sufficient evidence at all times and places where the said wills shall he requisite to be given in evidence. Now the will operates as a statutory conveyance; and if the original be produced and proved on the trial, it will, like any other original deed, be evidence of alienation. If the original be not so produced and proved, the party must either establish the fact of its loss, and resort to secondary proof of its contents, according to the rules of the common law, or he must resort to the proof prescribed by the statute, viz., probate according to the laws of this state before the proper officer, and the book of records of such office. Admitting, then, that the will was proved in a foreign state, to have been duly executed, as required by the laws of this state to pass real estate, still the act of congress does not reach the difficulty. It does not purport (even if it had the power so to do) to make the exemplification of a foreign record evidence of title to lands in this state.

This is done in express terms by the 4th section of the act of 1713-14, which declares that the copy of any will, made in any of her majesty’s colonies, by which any real estate within this colony is devised, being proved according to the custom of such colony, certified under the great seal of such colony, may be given, and shall be received in evidence in any of the courts of judicature within this province, and be esteemed as valid and sufficient, as if the original will or testament icere then and there produced and proved..

That act is still in force, and no reason is perceived why the copy of the will in this case should not have been certified according to its provisions. The word colony is to be taken as stale, where the copy is certified in any of the United States. 4 Griffith’s Am. Law Reg. 1241, § 72.

The act of 1846, relative to the probate of wills in this state, which have been admitted to probate in other states, contains a similar provision in regard to their efficacy as [260]*260instruments of'evidence. By the third section of that act (Nix. Dig. 878,) it is enacted that the record of such wills, and duly certified copies thereof, shall be evidence in the same manner, and shall have the same force and effect, in all courts of law and equity, as such records, or copies thereof, would have if such wills had been proved in the usual manner under the existing laws of this state.

It is manifest that, in the view of the framers of that enactment, it required legislative sanction to give to the record of a will, originally proved in a foreign state, though admitted to probate and recorded in this state upon the faith of such foreign probate, the efficacy, as an instrument of evidence, which it would have possessed if the will had been originally proved under the laws of this state. This view of the law has not only the sanction of legislative construction, but is supported by authority. 4 Griffith’s Am. Law Reg. 1241, note 1; Wallace v. Wallace, 2 Green’s Ch. Rep. 616.

The exemplification of the record of the will produced at the trial was therefore incompetent evidence as a muniment of title to the real estate in controversy. But it is objected, and we think truly, that the existence of the error constitutes no ground for reversal. It is a well-settled rule, that unless the error complained of did occasion, or might by possibility have occasioned, some prejudice to the rights of the defendant, it constitutes no ground for reversal.

The deed under which the plaintiffs below claimed title was executed by the widow and by all the children and heirs-at-law of William Banks, the testator, who died seized of the premises. Now it is perfectly clear, if the person last seized made no devise of the premises, the title vested by inheritance in his children, subject to the widow’s rights, of dower, and the widow and children were competent to convey title to the plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.J.L. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-whitely-nj-1857.