Union Land & Grazing Co. v. Arce

152 P. 1143, 21 N.M. 115
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1915
DocketNo. 1779
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 152 P. 1143 (Union Land & Grazing Co. v. Arce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Land & Grazing Co. v. Arce, 152 P. 1143, 21 N.M. 115 (N.M. 1915).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

ROBERTS, C. J.

(after stating the facts as above.)— While appellant assigns as error the fact that the trial court refused to consider the master’s report as an adjudication of Boney’s rights, he does not mention or argue the point in his brief, and therefore, in view of the uniform practice of this court, he will be considered as having abandoned the alleged error. The first proposition which he discusses is the alleged error in excluding Exhibit No. 4, offered by him for the purpose of establishing his title to the interest in the Mora grant, which he claims. . That exhibit was a certified copy of a purported paper recorded in the deed records of Mora county July 3, 1877, and reads as follows:

“Know by tbe present: That I; Pedro Valdez, of tbe county of San Miguel and territory of New Mexico, on tbe 3d day of tbe month of July, A. D. 1877, transfer, convey and cede in favor of Pablo Valdez, all tbe right, title, dominion, action and portion which has been transferred to me in writing which precedes by Santiago Boney and Feliciana Jiminez, his wife, in tbe same manner and in the same form that tbe real property contained in tbe said writing is described, in order that the said Pablo Valdez may enjoy it for bis heirs and assigns, forever.
“In witness whereof, I have placed my name and seal on this transfer on tbe day and month aforesaid.
Pedro Valdez [L. S.]
“Recorded on tbe 3d day of July, A. D. 1877.
“Pedro Valdez, Clerk.”

To the introduction of this exhibit the appellee objected because:

“It is unacknowledged, and therefore not entitled to record, and therefore that the record of it is not admissible. (2) That no proof of its execution has been offered to the court, and that, not being acknowledged, it does not prove itself. * * * ”

In the trial court, and in this court, appellant contends that such record was admissible on two grounds : First, appellee having parted with his interest in the land, by the conveyance marked “Exhibit No. 3,” he cannot' be heard to. object to the introduction of Exhibit No. 4 on any ground or for any reason; and, second, that it was admissible as an ancient record copy. While the second ground stated is not in exact accord with the statement made by appellant in the trial court, we shall assume that the record copjr was offered as an ancient record copy, because from the argument there advanced we infer that such was the understanding of court and counsel.

;[1] As to. the first contention by appellant, it is sufficient to say that a defendant, in a suit to quiet title, is entitled to require the plaintiff to prove title by competent evidence. Because a plaintiff may introduce in evidence a deed, purporting to have been executed by the defendant, does not require the defendant to sit silently by and permit a plaintiff to introduce an inadmissible document simply because that document purports to have been made by a grantee of the defendant’s grantee. Appellant sought to- quiet his title to the property in dispute as against the defendant. In order to do this the burden was upon him to establish title in himself. This he attempted to do by the introduction of the exhibit in question. If it was not competent and legal evidence, the defendant had the right to object to its introduction, regardless of what the plaintiff may have theretofore shown as to the condition of the title.'

[2] Was the record admissible as an ancient record copy? Appellee contends that because the instrument was not acknowledged, as required by section 3943, C. L. 1897, which was in force at the time the deed was executed, it was not entitled to record under section- 4792,' Code 1915, which was in force at the time the deed was recorded, and hence, not being, entitled to record, such' reer •ord was not admissible in evidence. It may be conceded, and properly so, that the record was not a.dmissible under the statute, as an official record, because not made in ác■cordanee with statutory provisions, and yet the-question still ’remains .whether the' -ancient record copy serves as sufficient .evidence .of genuineness to entitle' it to be admitted in evidence as a circumstance tending to prove the actual execution and delivery of the- paper of which it purports to be a copy. Where the alleged ancient original is lost, and an ancient purported copy is offered, made-by a private hand, and the purported maker is unknown or deceased, and the copy comes free from suspicion and the fact is established that it has been in existence for more than 30 years, it may be received in evidence under the ancient document rule. Wigmore on Evidence, § 2143. Where the alleged ancient original is lost or for other sufficient reason cannot be produced at the trial, and a purporting official record is offered, made more than 30 years before, and certifying the deed’s contents and execution, but inadmissible as an official" record because the statute law relative to its execution or acknowledgment has not been complied with, we can conceive of no valid reason why the copy cannot properly be received in evidence, as a circumstance tending to show that the original, from which it was copied, at that time was in existence,- and that it was executed by the party whose ñaméis signed to it. The weight to be accorded to this circumstance, or link in the chain of evidence, is another matter, .entirely divorced from the question of the admissibility of the evidence. Where the original title deed is-lost, under which a party claims title to real estate, and it was executed more than 30 years before it is sought to establish title under it, presumably all the parties and witnesses to the transaction are dead, and the claimant is compelled to resort to circumstantial evidence to prove his .chain of title. In order to establish the fact of title, under such conditions, the claimant is entitled to put in evidence every circumstance, properly admissible, which tends to show .the making and delivery of the deed under or through which he claims. The fact that there has heen recorded, in the deed records of a county, where the land is situate, a purported'deed to. the real estate, although such deed was not acknowledged so that it was entitled to record, more than 30 years before the copy is offered in evidence, is a strong circumstance tending .to. establish the existence and validity of the original deed. This fact alone, however, would not be sufficient to establish title, but would require some other confirming circumstance, such, for example, as the continuous possession of the land or some other item of corroboration, which coupled with such ancient record copy, would be sufficient-to produce in the mind proof of the fact that the original deed existed, and was executed by the grantor named therein.

The failure, upon the part of some of the courts and text-writers to distinguish between the admissibility and the weight of such evidence has led to much of the confusion and uncertainty which exists in this regard. Without attempting to quote from the text-writers or authorities, we cite the following, where the question will be found considered and the divergent views presented: Wigmore on Evidence, vol. 3, § 2143; Elliott on Evidence, vol. 2, § 1334; Ency. of Evidence, vol. 1, p. 881; Van Gunden v.

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Bluebook (online)
152 P. 1143, 21 N.M. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-land-grazing-co-v-arce-nm-1915.