Lessee of Clarke v. Courtney

30 U.S. 319, 8 L. Ed. 140, 5 Pet. 319, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 30 U.S. 319 (Lessee of Clarke v. Courtney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lessee of Clarke v. Courtney, 30 U.S. 319, 8 L. Ed. 140, 5 Pet. 319, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 356 (1831).

Opinion

*Story, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court. — This is a ■ writ of error founded on a judgment of the circuit court in the district of Kentucky, in an action of ejectment, in which the plaintiff in error ' was the original plaintiff. The case is before us upon certain bills of exception taken by the plaintiff ; and to the consideration of these the court will \ address their attention, without entering upon any examination of other „ facts, not involved in the decision of them.

Some of the defendants, professing to hold a conveyance from the lessor of the plaintiff, Clarke, made by Carey L. Clarke, as his attorney in fact, offered in evidence the deed of conveyance, and the letter of attorney, “ and gave testimony conducing to prove them And Andrew Moore, the clerk of the Harrison circuit court, who brought the letter of attorney into this court, under process for that purpose, desiring to return, and considering it his duty to retain possession of that instrument, by consent of plaintiff and defendants, departed with it, leaving a copy. And at a subsequent day, Moses L. Miller was introduced as a witness to prove the letter of attorney; *220 who stated, that being summoned as a witness, he met with the clerk of Harrison aforesaid, in Georgetown, who showed him an instrument, tbe signature of which he examined, and believed it to be the handwriting of James B. Clarke (the plaintiff’s lessor), with whose handwriting he was well acquainted ; and another witness was examined, tending to show that the instrument, so shown by said Moore to Miller, was the same previously read before this court, as aforesaid. When Andrew Moore (the clerk of Harrison court) was about to resume possession of the letter of attorney and to depart, the attorney of the plaintiff declared that he had no objection. It is not pretended, that any expectation of offering further proof was entertained, or intimated to the parties. To the admission of the testimony of Miller, the plaintiff objected, especially, in the absence of the letter of attorney. But the court overruled the objection, and submitted the testimony to the jury, as tending to prove that instrument.”

The letter of attorney purports to be made by “ James B. Clarke, of the city of New York, and Eleanor his wife,” to “Carey L. Clarke, of the city of New York ;” to be dated on the 7th of October 1796, and to be sealed , ancl delivered in the presence of three witnesses. *The question is, -1 whether, under these circumstances, it ought to have been admitted in evidence ?

In the ordinary course of legal proceedings, instruments under seal, purporting to be executed in the presence of a witness, must be proved by the testimony of the subscribing witness, or his absence sufficiently accounted for. Where he is dead, or cannot be found, or is without the jurisdiction, or is otherwise incapable of being produced, the next best secondary evidence is the proof of his handwriting; and that, when proved, affords primé facie evidence of a due execution of the instrument, for it is presumed, that he would not have subscribed his name to a false attestation. If, upon due search and inqury, no one can be found who can prove his handwriting, there is no doubt, that resort may then be had to proof of the handwriting of the party who executed the instrument; indeed, such proof may always be produced as corroborative evidence of its due and valid execution, though it is not, except under the limitations above suggested, primary evidence. Whatever may have been the origin of this rule, and in whatever reasons it may have been founded, it has been too long established, to be disregarded ; or to justify an inquiry into its original correctness.

The rule was not complied with in the case at bar. The original instrument was not produced at the trial, nor the subscribing witnesses ; and their non-production was not accounted for. The instrument purports to be an ancient one; but no evidence was offered in this stage of the cause, to connect it with possession under it, so as to justify its admission as an ancient deed, without further proof. It is said, that the conduct of the parties amounted to a waiver of the due proof of the original. We are of opinion, that the production of the original was, under the circumstances, dispensed with by the parties, and that a copy of it was impliedly assented to as a substitute for the original. But we do not think, that the implication goes farther, and dispenses with the ordinary proof of the due execution of the original, in the same manner as if the original were present. It would be going very far, to, draw such a conclusion, from circumstances of so *221 equivocal a nature. The rules of evidence are too important securities for the titles to property, *to allow such loose presumptions to prevail. It would be opening a door to great practical inconvenience ; and if a waiver of the ordinary proof is intended, it is easily reduced to writing.

It is also said, that the language of the exception, that the defendants gave testimony “ conducing to prove” the instruments, may well be interpreted by the court to have included all the usual preliminary proofs. We do not think so : to justify the admission of the lowest kind of secondary proof, it should clearly appear, that all the preliminary steps have been taken and established. The court can presume nothing; there may not have been any preliminary proof whatsoever of the absence, death or incapacity of the witnesses ; and yet there may have been some evidence “ conducing to prove ” the due execution of the instruments. And the very circumstance stated in the bill of exception, that Miller was introduced, as a witness to prove the letter of attorney,” repels the presumption that any antecedent proof had been given, which in point of law dispensed with the ordinary proofs. We think, then, that the testimony ought not to have been admitted, and that this exception is well founded.

The plaintiff having then given prima facie evidence of title under a patent to Martin Pickett of 55,390 acres, and that the defendants were in possession of the land in controversy, and that the lessor of the plaintiff (Clarke), at the date of his deed, and ever since was, and had been, a citizen and resident of the state of New York, and having relied solely on the demise from Clarke, the defendants offered in evidence certain exhibits. One of these purported to be a release of 49,952 acres, by Carey L. Clarke, as attorney for James B. Clarke and John Byrant, on the 25th of November 1800, acknowledged before the surveyor of Scott county, and afterwards lodged with the auditor of public accounts. It recited, that James B. Clarke and Eleanor his wife, and John Byrant and Mary his wife, had appointed Carey L. Clarke their attorney, to sell, transfer and convey a certain tract on the waters of Eagle creek, in the county of Scott, and state of Kentucky, containing 100, L92 acres, entered in the name of Martin Pickett, ‘•‘which tract of land was then held by Clarke and Byrant as tenants r^g^g in common. It then proceeded to state, “ Now, therefore, I, the said *- Carey L. Clarke, attorney

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 U.S. 319, 8 L. Ed. 140, 5 Pet. 319, 1831 U.S. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lessee-of-clarke-v-courtney-scotus-1831.