Le Roy v. Servis

2 Cai. Cas. 175
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedFebruary 15, 1805
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Cai. Cas. 175 (Le Roy v. Servis) 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
Le Roy v. Servis, 2 Cai. Cas. 175 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1805).

Opinion

Benson, J.

I premise, that in a case otherwise properly cognisable in a court of law, if the plaintiff, for want of a writing, the evidence of his right, is obliged to sue in equity, it is a rule there, that he must verify on oath, the allegation that the writing is lost, or in the possession of the defendant; that this rule is in the same reason with the rule in the courts of law, in cases of pleas to the jurisdiction, foreign pleas, and claims of cognisance, and is intended only to prevent a change or transfer of jurisdiction, without any cause shown as arising from facts proved on oath, and doth not diminish or deprive the defendant of any real advantage of defence; so, that the proof, although not absolutely [176]*176positive and conclusive, but less precise and full, will suffice. That in order to confine the rule to its mere object, if the bill is for discovery only, or if it ts for a general discovery of all writings in the possession of the defendant, whatsoever they may be, and where it is to be supposed the plaintiff hath no particular knowledge of them, but yet that some writings of some kind, in which he is interested, and relative to the property he seeks to recover, do exist and are in the possession of the defendant, that in these cases, the allegation of ¡the loss of the papers, or that they are in the possession of the defendant, need not be on oath. That until some decisions in England, within ten years past, it hath always been held, as it is expressed in the books, that “ a demurrer being bad in part, must be overruled,” for it is not like a plea “ which may be allowed in part; but a demurrer void in part is void in toto, and can - not be separated,” “ that a general demurrer to the xvhole bill, if there is any part of the bill to which the defendant ought to put in an answer, the demurrer being entire, must be overruled,” “ that a demurrer if defective in part, is bad for the whole, for it cannot be split.” That although the decisions of the English courts are deservedly of great authority, yet the reasons in these alluded to, “ the supposed hardship, on a defendant, if he cannot avoid the expense of taking a copy of a long bill, if there chances to be a right to a discovery,” and thereby making “ the only question to be, whether the plaintiff should be put to the expense of a bill, or the defendant of a newdemurrrer,” are not convincing; for if the defendant, instead of a general demurrer to [177]*177the whole bill will demur particularly to each sepa, rate or distinct part or matter, to which he may suppose <£ he ought not to putin an answer,” the demurrer may be overruled as to some parts or matters, and allowed as to others ; and the defendant, among other costs, may be decreed the expense of so much of the copy of the bill, to which the demurrer was allowed ; so, that there will not, in that respect, be any hardship left on him. It may be also stated, that there are other means, and within the powers of the court, to correct the mischief, if it prevails, of filing bills of an undue length, containing matters to which the defendant ought not to answer, preferably to merely turning the plaintiff round, and subjecting him to the delay and expense of a new bill. The conclusion, therefore, is, that there hath not appeared to us sufficient reason to chánge an established and approved practice ; and, consequently, if there are any matters in the bill, to which the defendants ought to have put in an answer, the demurrer being general, and to the whole bill, must be overruled in the whole. This leads to an examination of the several causes of demurrer.

First cause of demurrer.—The defendants object to the proof as arising from the affidavit of the complainant, Boon ; 1st. That there is only the oath of one, whereas there ought to be an oath from every of the complainants ; 2dly. That the oath ought not only to state the destruction of the supposed writings, but also that the deponents have them not in their own possession ; and 3dly. That the deponent doth aot swear from his own knowledge, but from the information of others. Here I state that the proof of [178]*178the allegation of the loss of the writing is restricted to the oath of the party, in exclusion of the oath of a stranger; and, therefore, if the circumstances of ' the case are such, as that it is to be presumed the party cannot know the facts from his-own knowledge, he must then, from necessity, be admitted to testify from the credible information, or in other words, from the hearsay of others ; that, whenever the law admits hearsay testimony, the fact is then as competently thereby proved and established, as if the person giving testimony, was to testify from his own knowledge ; that, whenever a person swears from the credible information of others, it not only implies that he hath inquired to an extent, and in a manner, to produce a rational belief, that the fact is as he testifies it to be, but it also excludes the supposition that he hath any reason even to suspect it to be otherwise; that, a distinction is to be taken between the cases, where the writing is so lost, only, as that it cannot for the present be found, yet is supposecbstill to exist, and the cases where the writing is wholly destroyed, and, therefore, supposed not to exist; and that, although in some of the former cases, it may be proper, in order to guard against evasion, to require the party to swear also, that he hath not himself the writing in his possession, yet, that in the latter cases, it would be altogether a useless accumulation of proof; it would be to require proof of another proposition of fact, which follows as a necessary logical consequence from one already proved. Assuming it, therefore, and which, I think, cannot bé questioned, that the present is one of the cases in which proof from -the information, or hearsay of others, is to be received, then the fact, of the de[179]*179struction of the supposed conveyances, from the original patentees to Sir William Johnson, is duly and competently proved; and, consequently, the affidavit of the complainant, Boon, alone is sufficient, so that the first cause of demurrer fails.

Second cause of demurrer. — It must be admitted, that there cannot be a more sound or salutary principle than the one on which this cause of demurrer proceeds; that a court of equity should always withhold its aid and countenance from a suitor, whose conduct appears in any part, such as a conscience rightly informed, cannot approve : but the principle is not applicable to the present case. The supposed illegality of the agreement between the original patentees and Sir William Johnson, consists in its being in contravention of the instruction from the king to the governor, restraining the patents for lands, to quantities not exceeding 1,000 acres to each patentee. The futility of this regulation was soon discerned, and the instruction was, for not much less, if any, than half a century before the patent mentioned in the bill issued, considered altogether as a dead letter, and the compliance with it a mere matter of form.— But, even conceding that the legality of an agreement, similar to the one supposed to have taken place between the patentees and Sir William Johnson, might be made a question, yet that could only be the case where the agreement was before

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Cai. Cas. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-roy-v-servis-nycterr-1805.