Toler v. White

24 F. Cas. 3, 1 Ware 280, 1834 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedDecember 22, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 3 (Toler v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toler v. White, 24 F. Cas. 3, 1 Ware 280, 1834 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8 (D. Me. 1834).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

2 [The admission of the consul’s certificate as evidence is objected to in the first place because he is a [4]*4.party in the case. The general rule is that a person whose name appears as a party on the record cannot be heard as a witness to support his own cause. The reason is that he is directly interested in the event of the suit, either from having an immediate interest in the matter in controversy, and therefore obtaining a certain benefit or loss, as the decision may be either in his favor or against him, or from his liability to cost in the event of an adverse decision. This is the sole reason for his exclusion, and the rule by which he is excluded, extends no farther than the reason on which it is founded. When, therefore, he has no interest in the subject in controversy, and is not liable for costs, whatever may be the decision, he is like any other disinterested person a competent witness. On this uis-tinetion the members of charitable corporations have been held to be competent witnesses for the corporation, they not being personally interested in the suit nor liable for costs (Weller v. Governors of Foundling Hospital, Peake, 153); and for the same reason it was ruled by Judge Washington, in Willings v. Consequa [Case No. 17.767], that a party who had assigned to his co-plaintiff’s all his interest in the matter in controversy, and had been indemnified by them against costs by a deposit with the clerk, of a sum sufficient to cover the costs already arisen and those which probably "Would arise, was a competent witness for hls co-plaintiffs, though his name stood on the record as a party to the cause. The interest which a party has, says Mr. Justice Washington, in the event of the suit, both as to costs and the subject in dispute, is the reason why he cannot be a witness; and when that interest is removed the objection ceases. In this case the suit is directed by the statute to be prosecuted in the name of the consul. But it is commenced by the order of the United States, it is prosecuted for their benefit and by their attorney, and the penalty when recovered is recovered for their use. The consul’s name is used instead of that of the United States, the real plaintiff, as the postmaster-general stands on the record as the nominal plaintiff, in all suits commenced for debts due to the post office. The consul has no interest in the subject in controversy, and no control over the action. He is a mere nominal plaintiff and is not, as I understand the law, liable for costs, in the event that the decision is against him. The objection to the admissibility of the certificate on tne ground that the consul is a party on the record cannot be sustained. It is further objected that the evidence is taken ex parte. The answer to this objection is that it is taken by neither party in the proper sense of the word, unless the consul should be considered in this act as the representative of the United States. The evidence comes from a public officer in the regular discharge of the proper functions of his office, and as a part of his regular and ordinary official duty. It cannot therefore with propriety be termed ex parte evidence.

[Another objection is that it is not under oath. It is true that the certificate is not confirmed by the oath of the consul. But it cannot be considered as wholly unprovided with the sanction of an oath. In giving the certificate he acts as a public officer within the proper sphere of his official duty, and though the attestation of his oath is not given directly to the certificate, it is made under the obligation, of his oath of office. There are many cases in which the certificate of a public officer, acting within the range of his official duty, is received as evidence without being verified by the oath of the officer. Indeed they are not thus usually verified. But this is not admitting evidence unsupported by oath. The official oath of the officer applies to the certificate, and is binding on the officer in giving it, as far as an oath can bind. The violation of truth is not in such cases, indeed, usually visited with the penalties of perjury, but is punished as an official misdemeanor. But it is not on that account the less perjury in the forum of conscience. The return of an officer on a precept of court is received as evidence, but it is not sworn to. A copy of a record, certified under the official seal of the recording officer, is not verified by any other oath than his oath of office. Yet this is admitted in evidence and is of higher authority than an examined copy which is sworn to by any other person. Bull. N. P. 226.

[But though these objections are not conclusive against the admissibility of the certificate, the question still recurs, is it competent evidence? As it does not present itself in -a form, which entitles it to be received according to the ordinary rules of courts of law, it belongs to him who offers it to shew, that it is within some principle, that takes it out of the ordinary rule, by which papers of this kind are excluded from the character of evidence. No decision directly in point has been referred to in the argument. I have met with none in my own researches. Yet it can hardly be doubted that this precise question must have occurred in the practice of the courts. In deciding the question, then, we must recur to general principles.

[A consul holds a high and responsible office. The original object of the institution of the office was purely commercial, it being the consul’s duty to watch over and protect the commercial rights of his country, within 'the limits of his consulate. This is a general duty, which it is believed results from the nature of his office. But there are some particular duties, which are specifically required of him by the laws of this country, and one of them is that mentioned in the section of the law on which this action is founded, viz., that of receiving the papers of all American vessels arriving at the port where he resides. [5]*5The receiving of the register of a vessel is an official act done In discharging the ordinary functions of his office. He is 'therefore the proper person to' be called upon to prove, whether it was deposited with him or not; and if it was not, he is the only person by whom this fact can be proved. It' would seem, therefore, that he must be a competent witness, from the necessity of the case, and the only question which can be raised, is, whether his testimony must- be under oath. I think it is not necessary; but that the authentication- of the certificate, by the seal of the -consulate, is equivalent to a verification of it by the oath of - the party. It is not contended that the annexation of the seal of the consulate to every certificate will make it evidence. It is only when he certifies a fact, which falls within his official cognisance, in the regular discharge of the duties of his office. Why should not his certificate, authenticated under the seal of the consulate, have the same credit as the certificate of the clerk under the seal of the court? In the case of Church v. Hubbart, 2 Cranch [6 U. S.] 187, the certificate of the American consul at Lisbon was offered to prove a law of Portugal. It was annexed to a copy of a translation of the .law certifying that the Copy was a true one and that the translation was correct. It was adjudged to be inadmissible as evidence. The chief justice, in delivering the opinion of the court, observed, that to give this certificate the force of testimony, it would be necessary ' to show, that it was one of the consular, functions, to which the laws of this country attach credit. The certificate in that case was an extra-official act.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 3, 1 Ware 280, 1834 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toler-v-white-med-1834.