Hood v. Mathers

9 Ky. 553, 2 A.K. Marsh. 553, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 17, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Ky. 553 (Hood v. Mathers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hood v. Mathers, 9 Ky. 553, 2 A.K. Marsh. 553, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 144 (Ky. Ct. App. 1820).

Opinion

Judge Mills

delivered the opinion.

This is an action of ejectment, brought on the demise of Hannah Hood as lessor of the plaintiff, against Richard Mathers; and on the trial, the lessor of the plaintiff gave in evidence, a patent from the commonwealth of Virginia to William Greenough, dated on the 20th February, 1786, and a conveyance from William Greenough to John Hood, for an undivided moiety of the tract contained in the patent, which deed bore date on the 29th July, 1786. She also proved the boundaries of the patent, and that the defendant resided within it, at the commencement of the suit. She next offered in evidence and read, without objection, two depositions, which proved that John Hood, the grantee in the aforesaid deed, died on the 16th of July, 1787, and left the lessor of the plaintif, his wife and also one son, by the same woman, who was his and her only child, named John Hood, and that he also died after he was over twenty-one years of age, on the 23d September, 1812, leaving his said mother then and still living. The same witnesses also proved, that they heard and saw John Hood, the younger, after his arrival at the age of twenty-one years, sign, seal, publish and declare a will to be his last will and testament, and that at the doing thereof he was of sound disposing mind and memory, and that they had compared the certified copy annexed to the depositions, with the original will now on file and remaining of record in the office of the register of wills, for the county and city of Philadelphia, in [554]*554the state of Pennsylvania, and that the copy so certified was a true copy of the original will. Both the said witnesses also deposed, that they were the same persons who were witnesses to the original will. The lessor of the plaintiff then offered the copy of the will annexed to their depositions, which devised the estate to Hannah Hood the lessor of the plaintiff his mother. The said copy appeared, by a certificate thereon, to have been proved by one of the same subscribing witnesses, before the register of wills, of Philadelphia, whose certificate was also annexed, stating it to be a true copy of the original will and probate thereof on file and remaining in his office. To this certificate the seal of office was annexed. After this, followed the certificate of the mayor and chief magistrate of the city of Philadelphia, stating that the register who certified the copy was register of wills for said city and county, and also president of the register’s court for the same county and city, duly commissioned and sworn, and that his certificate and attestation was in due form of law and entitled to full faith and credit. To this last certificate of the mayor, his name was subscribed and the seal of the corporation of the city affixed. These certificates of authentication the counsel for the lessor of the plaintiff first read to the court, for the purpose of dispensing with the production of the original will, by shewing that it was retained in the office and could not be produced, and that for this cause, the copy ought to be admitted. To the reading of this copy of the will, the defendant’s counsel objected, because the copy was not proved and recorded in this state, and because it was not properly authenticated, and because the depositions of the attesting witnesses, before read, were inadmissible to prove the copy. The court sustained the objections, and would not permit the copy to be read, to which opinion the plaintiff excepted, and the correctness of this opinion is the first question made by the assignment of error. We cannot concur with the counsel in the court below in all the reasons assigned for the rejection of the will. It is true, this court has decided that copies of wills, taken from foreign copies, which had been proved and admitted to record in a county court of this state, might be given in evidence. It is also decided, that the authenticated copy of a will, from a sister state, proved according to the law there, which law allowed of its probate as to personal estate only, did not entitle the will to be given in evidence as a genuine [555]*555paper, on the production of its probate in such state and certificates of authentication only. But it is no where decided, that a will which is not proved and recorded in a court of this country passes no title, or that such will might not be produced and proved on the trial as an unrecorded deed. Nor do we perceive in this case, any solid objection to giving a sworn copy in evidence on such proof as is here exhibited, and shewing that the original was detained in the custody of the law, in another state. But it is evident that to authorise such a will, or a copy to be given in evidence, which never had been proved before a court of competent jurisdiction for the purpose of admitting it to record, the execution of the will by the testator, ought to be proved in such manner as to make it a valid will: or, in other words, every act ought to be proved, on the part of the testator and witnesses, which the law re quires, to make the will a good and valid will to pass real estate. This leads us to examine the proof of the witnesses in their depositions, to discover whether they have proved as much as the statute requires to make a valid will, In this respect their testimony is defective. They have proved the publication of the will, and the acknowledgement of it by the testator, and also his capacity at the time, to make it. But they have failed to prove that they or any other witnesses attested it, subscribing their names in his presence, which is required by the act of assembly. See 1 Litt. 611. 614. This seems to be essential, by the words of the act, as part of the proof to be made, and their testimony, on this subject is silent, and for this reason alone, we concur with the court below in rejecting the will, because it was not fully proved upon the trial.

A copy of a will made & recorded in a sister state & proved & recorded here is evidence, not so if such copy be tendered as evidence on the probate alone of such sister state. A sworn copy of a will proved & recorded in the proper office of a sister state, as evidence here as an unrecorded deed, but the depositions must shew that every requisite necessary to constitute a good will according to our statuteof wills, has been complied with in such sister state. A slight variance b’tw’n the real situation of the title of lands sold for the direct tax, & the recital in th' marshalls deed, may be reconcil'd by parol evidence.

After this decision of the court below, the plaintiff offered to read to the jury, a deed from Joseph Crockett, late marshall of the district of Kentucky, to John Hood, dated on the 11th November, 1807. This deed recites that the tract sold and then to be conveyed was 30,000 acres, being the same quantity contained in the aforesaid patent of Wm. Greenough, and that it was listed as the property of John Hood, and charged with the direct tax and costs, for which John Gray, & co. of Logan county, purchased the whole, it having been sold by Daniel L. Morrison, collector of the district for the third collection district at Bardstown, on the 17th February, 1803. The deed then purports to convey to John Hood as assignee of said Grey, & co. the whole of [556]*556said tract of land, and appears to have been regularly acknowledged in the clerk’s office of this court, at its date, and committed to record.

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49 Ky. 420 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1850)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ky. 553, 2 A.K. Marsh. 553, 1820 Ky. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-mathers-kyctapp-1820.