Murray v. . Marsh
This text of 17 F. Cas. 1059 (Murray v. . Marsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Loomis and Tillinghast assigned to the plaintiffs the note sued on, which was made by the defendants, and afterwards became bankrupts, and obtained a certificate. And now Loomis is offered as a witness for the plaintiffs. .He is a competent witness, for he is by'the. certificate discharged of all debts provable under the commission, and his indorsement to the plaintiffs rendered him liable-to them, so as to make their demand provable against him; secondly, the record of the proceedings against them, attested by the clerk of the district court, without any certificate-of the presiding judge, is good evidence; for the act of congress relates to certificates in case of-officers of the several states, not to those of the United States; thirdly, if the objection to a witness arises from proof made by the objector, the witness cannot discharge himself of the objection by any matter sworn by himself; it must be removed by proof drawn from some other source; fourthly, depositions, not specifying the parties between whom they are taken, in the caption, nor naming them as parties in the body of the deposition, cannot be received; fifthly, if a plaintiff supposing himself ready, press for trial, and it is found on trial that the testimony he relied on cannot be given in evidence as he expected, and he be nonsuited, the allegation of surprise shall not prevail to set aside the nonsuit
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
17 F. Cas. 1059, 1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 22, 3 N.C. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-marsh-circtnc-1803.