Mobley v. . Watts

3 S.E. 677, 98 N.C. 284
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 3 S.E. 677 (Mobley v. . Watts) 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
Mobley v. . Watts, 3 S.E. 677, 98 N.C. 284 (N.C. 1887).

Opinion

*286 Davis, J.,

(after stating the case). The record having once existed, and having been destroyed by fire, the question presented is, can secondary evidence be admitted to prove facts of which the lost or destroyed record furnished the primary .and best evidence ?

The defendant insists that it cannot, and that the loss can only be supplied and the evidence made available by the mode prescribed in Hie Code, §55 ei seq., for the restoration of “ burnt and lost records,” and for this numerous authorities are cited, which we have examined with care, and the more so because of the confidence and earnestness with which the very able counsel who represented the defendant relied on the correctness of the position.

Foster v. Woodfin, 65 N. C., 29, relied on, was a motion to amend the record, and it was said that “ whenever by any accident there has been an omission by the proper officer to record any proceeding of a Court of record, the Court has the power, and it is its duty, on the application of any person interested, to have such proceeding recorded as of its proper date.”

This is only the assertion of the power inherent in every Court of record to make its records sjieak the truth, and has no reference to lost records, and the same may be said of the State v. McAlpin, 4 Ired., 140, cited. The cases of Wade v. Odeneal, 3 Dev., 423; Drake v. Merrill, 2 Jones, 368; Sutton v. Westcott, 3 Jones, 283; Borwick v. Wood, Ibid., 306, and Spencer v. Cohoon, 1 D. &. R, 27, and 4 Dev., 226, were none of them cases of lost record, but only refer to parol evidence •offered to explain or prove existing records. Glass v. Stinson, 2 Sumner, 605, cited also in Myers’ Fed. Dec., §914, vol. 17, was a case in which it was sought to establish by depositions the fact that there had been an indictment, trial, conviction .and sentence, “which,” said Judge Story, who delivered the opinion, “ should be proved by a production of-the record itself.” The record in that case was not lost, and, as was *287 said, by the Judge, “ the best evidence was the original or a certified copy.”

Gridley v. Phillips, 5 Kansas, 349, simply declared that under a sale made by an administrator under judicial proceedings in which the administrator was ordered to execute a deed to the purchaser, a deed made by the agent of the administrator was not valid. The record existed, but it did not give validity to a deed not executed in accordance with its directions, hut by one not authorized by law to make it.

Freeman on Void Judicial Sales, 88 and 89, relied upon by the defendant, only goes to the extent of declaring that an essential statutory requisite in a judicial sale cannot be dispensed with even in a Court of Equity.

In Illinois certain heirs recovered judgment in ejectment for land purchased at a guardian’s sale. .There was no report made by the guardian of his proceedings under the order of sale, and, of course, ho confirmation.

The purchaser filed a bill to enjoin the execution of the judgment and for general relief. This was denied in Young v. Dowling, 15 Ill., 481, cited by Freeman.

It was put upon the ground, pure and simple, that the requirement of the statute had not been complied with, and that “ the purchaser at these statutory sales gets no imperfect equitable title which may be perfected in chancery; he gets the whole title which the infant had, or he gets no title whatever.” There was and had been no record.

In Weatherhead v. Baskerville, 11 Howard, 360, cited in defendant’s brief, also in 17 Myers’ Federal Decisions, §9.16, it is said: “ The burning of an office and of its records is no proof that a particular record had ever existed. It only lays the foundation for the inferior evidence.”

Instead of sustaining the position of the defendant it clearly admits the contrary view, that the record having once existed and been lost, secondary evidence is permitted to supply the loss, and we find abundant authority for this *288 latter position. We have seen no decision to the contrary. The nearest approach to it is a short opinion of Judge Moore in Hargett and wife v._, reported in 2 Haywood, 76, (243 of Martin and 2 Haywood Law and Equity, by Judge Battle,) to which our attention has been called by Justice. Merrimon, and which is as follows:- “The contents of a. record, lost or destroyed, cannot be proved otherwise than by a copy. It is better to suffer private mischief than a public inconvenience, especially one of such magnitude as the introducing of parol testimony to supply a record.”

The eminent Judge does not exclude all secondary evidence, but limits it to copies. He cites no authority, and the ruling is questioned by the Reporter, Judge Haywood, himself a jurist of great learning and ability, in a full note, in which he says, “ all former decisions are at variance with this decision,” and in which he shows, by forceful reasoning and high authority, that the contents of a lost record may be proved by parol, when better evidence cannot be had. He cites a number of authorities, among them Lord Mansfield, who, in Cowper, 109, says: “If a foundation can be laid that a record or deed existed and was afterwards lost, it may be supplied by the next best evidence to be had.”

In the note referred to it is said: “ Parol testimony may misrepresent facts, and so may deeds and records; but as because -in the latter there is a greater probability of truth than in parol testimony, and for that reason the law requires them, so because there is no record nor deed, nor any copy, parol evidence will in general relate the fact truly, and is as much better than- no evidence at all, as records and deeds are superior to itself, it ought to be received upon the same principle as they are, not because there is absolute certainty either in the one or the other (for a record or deed may be altered or corrupted, substituted or the like,) but because in choosing probabilities, it is wise to take the best that offers. To require the production of a record or deed when there is *289 undoubted proof of its destruction, is to require an impossibility, and lex nemenim cogit ad impossibilia; to say his right shall be lost with the record or deed that forms it, though destroyed by invincible calamity, is to inflict punishment for the acts of heaven and actus dei nemini facit in-juria,”

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