Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Howard

54 U.S. 307, 14 L. Ed. 157, 13 How. 307, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 862
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by163 cases

This text of 54 U.S. 307 (Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Howard) 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
Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad v. Howard, 54 U.S. 307, 14 L. Ed. 157, 13 How. 307, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 862 (1852).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Sebre Howard brought-his action of-covenant broken, in.the' Circuit Court of the United States for the District of’Maryland, and upon the trial, the defendants took seven bills of exception, which are here for consideration upon a writ of error. Each of them must be separately examined.

The first;- raises the question, whether Howard could prove that a certain suit was pending in Cecil County Court by the testimony of the clerk of that court to the verity of a copy of the docket-entries made in that suit by him, as clerk.

*331 It is not objected that a copy of the docket-entries was produced instead of the original entries,, because no court is required to permit its original entries to go out of the custody of its own officers, in.the place appointed for their preservation; but the objection is, that a formal record ought to have been shown. There are two distinct answers to this objection, either of which is sufficient.

By the act of Assembly of Maryland, (1817, c. 119,) the clerk of the County Court is not required to make up a formal record. The docket-entries and files of the court stand in place of the record. When a formal record is not required by law, those entries which are permitted to stand in place of it are admissible in evidence. Several judicial decisions in England have been referred to by the counsel of the plaintiff in error, to the effect, that the finding of an indictment at the sessions cannot be proved by the production of the minute-book of the sessions, from which book the roll, containing the record of such proceedings, is subsequently made up. See 2 Phil. Ev. 194. But the distinction between those cases and a case like this is pointed out in a recent decision of the Court of King’s Bench in Regina v. Yeoveley, 8 Ad. & El. 806, in which it was held, that the minute-book of the sessions was admissible to prove the fact that an order of removal had been made, it appearing that-it'was not the practice to make up any other record of such an order; and Lord Denman fixes on the precise ground on which the evidence was admissible in this case, when he says, “ the book contains a caption, and the decision of the sessions; and their decision is the fact to be proved.”

So in Arundell v. White, 14 East, 216, the plaintiff offered the minute-book of the Sheriff’s Court in London, containing the entry of the plaint, and the word “withdrawn,”' opposite to the entry, and proved it was the usual course of the court to make such an entry when the suit was abandoned by the plaintiff; it was held to be competent evidence to prove the abandonment of the suit by the plaintiff and its final termination. In Commonwealth v. Bolkom, 3 Pick. 281, it was decided that the minute-book of the sessions, showing the 'grant of a license to the defendant, was legal evidence of that fact, there being no statute requiring a technical record to be made up.

And in Jones v. Randall, Cowper’s R. 17, copies of the minute-book of the House of Lord's were admitted in evidence . of a decree, because it was not the practice to make a formal record.

The principle of all these decisions is the same. Where the law, which governs the tribunal, requires no other record than the one, a copy of which is presented, that is sufficient. In *332 Maryland, no technical record was required by law to be made up by the clerks of the county courts; and, therefore, no other record than the one. produced was needful to prove the pendency of an action in such a court.

But there is another point of view in which this evidence, was clearly admissible.

The fact to be proved was the pendency of an-action. An action is pending when it is duly entered in court. The entry of an action in court is made, by an entry on the docket, of the title of the case, by the proper officer, in the due course of his official duty. Proof of such an entry being made by the proper officer, accompanied by the presumption which the law entertains, that he has done his duty in making it, is proof that the action was duly entertained in court, and so proof that the action was pending; and if the other party asserts that it had been disposed of, at any particular time after it was entered, he must show it. The docket-entry of the action was therefore admissible for this special purpose, because it was the very fact which, when shown, proved the pendency of the action, until' the other party showed its termination.

The second bill of exceptions was taken to the ruling of the court admitting a witness to testify that he was present at the trial of the above-mentioned case in Cecil County Court,'in December, 1847, in which Sebre Howard and Hiram Howard were shown b.y the docket-entries to have been plantiffs, and the 'Wilmington and Susquehannah Railroad Corporation defendant ; that the plaintiffs at that trial relied on a paper writing, shown to the witness, and set out in the bill of exceptions; that one of the counsel of the defendant had in his possession another paper writing, also shown to the .witness, and being the deed declared on in this suit; and that the defendant’s counsel handed this last-mentioned paper to the presiding judge, and spoke of it as the true and genuine contract between the parties.

To render the rilling, to which this bill of exceptions was taken, intelligible, it is necessary to state, that the Wilmington- and Susquehannah Railroad Corporation was the defendant in that action, which was assumpsit, founded on the paper first spoken of by the witness, which did not bear the seal of the corporation; that by,the act of Assembly of 4837, c. 30, the Baltimore and Susquehannah Company, the Baltimore and Port Deposit Company, and the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Company, were consolidated, under the name of the Philadelphia, WilAiington, and Baltimore Railroad Company, and that this action being covenant, against the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad Company, and the, plea non est factum, the plaintiff was endeavoring to prove, that the *333 paper declared on bore the corporate seal of the Wilmington and Siisquehannah Railroad Company. This being the fact to be proved, evidence that the corporation, through its counsel, had treated the instrument as bearing the corporate seal, and relied upon it as a deed of the corporation, was undoubtedly admissible. It is objected that the parties to that suit were not the-same as in this one; but this is wholly immaterial. The evidence does not derive its validity from any privity of parties. It tends to prove an admission by the corporation, that the instrument was sealed with its seal. It is further objected that the admission was not made by the defendants in this action, but by the Wilmington and Susquehannah Corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 U.S. 307, 14 L. Ed. 157, 13 How. 307, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-wilmington-baltimore-railroad-v-howard-scotus-1852.