Winn v. Patterson

34 U.S. 663, 9 L. Ed. 266, 9 Pet. 663, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 17, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 34 U.S. 663 (Winn v. Patterson) 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
Winn v. Patterson, 34 U.S. 663, 9 L. Ed. 266, 9 Pet. 663, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 365 (1835).

Opinion

. Mr Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is á writ of error to the circuit court of the district of Georgia., The cause, which is an ejectment, has been twice before this’ court, and the decisions then had, will be found reported in IT Wheat. Rep. 33,0, and 5 Peters’s Rep. 233; to which we may therefore refer, as containing a statement of many of the material'facts.

At the neW trial had in November term 1833, in pursuance of the mandate of this court. The plaintiff, to maintain the issue on his part, gave in evidence a copy of a grant from the state of Georgia to Basil Jones, for- seven thousand three hundred acres, including the lands in controversy, dated the 24th of May 1787, with a plat of survey thereto annexed.- He then offered-a copy of a-power of. attorney from Basil Jones to Thomas Smyth, Juni.or, purporting tobe dated the 6th of August 1793, and to authorize Smyth, among other things, to sell and' convey the. tract of seven thousand three 'hundred acres, so granted, which power purported to be signed and sealed in the *673 presence, of “Abram Jones, J. P.,. and Thomas Harwood, Jun.and the copy was certified to be a true copy from the records ofsRichmond county, Georgia; and recorded therein, on the 11th day of July 1795.. And to account for the loss of the original power of attorney, of which the copy was offered, and of the use of due diligence and search to. find the same, the . plaintiff read the affidavit of William Patterson, the lessor of. the plaintiff, which in substance stated, that he had riot in hi? possession, power or custody, the original grant; and that he verily believed the original power of attorney and grant have been lost or destroyed; He also read, for the same, purpose,

- the deposition of Andrew Fleming, which stated in substance, the searches made by him amoDg Thomas Smyth’s papers, and the information received . by him, leading to the conclusion, that the same has been lost or destroyed.. Also, the.deposition of -Mrs.Smyth, the widow of Thomas Smyth, for the same purpose. Also, the deposition of Richard H. Wilde, which stated several searches inade by him for the. original power, in the office of the clerk of Richmond county, and in other’places, and an application to the wife of Basil Jones,, and to the son of Thomas Smyth, for the like purpose ; and an advertisement in two Georgia newspapers, for information respecting the same, all of which proved ineffectual. The same witness also stated, that Abram Jones, the supposed subscribing witness, was, by public reputation, long since dead. It was admitted that Abram Jones was, at the time of the supposed execution .of the power, a justice.of the peace.

The plaintiff also read in evidence the deposition of William. Robertson, who stated that he was deputy clerk of the court • of Richmond county in 1794* and clerk in 1795, and continued in office uritil 1808 or 1809; that he was well acquainted with Abram Jones, and his handwriting, during the years .1793, 1794 and 1795, and before and afterwards. That .the record of the power of attorney from B. Jones to -Thomas Smyth, Jun., made by himself? while clerk of the court, is a copymf an original power of attorney, which he believes to have beén genuine, for that the official signature of Abram Jones must have induced him to commit the same to record ; and that the copy of the said power of jatlomey transmitted with the deponent’s depositions (the ■ copy before the court), *674 hadbeeii compared with the .record of the original made by. . himself in Richmond county, and is a true copy.-'

The plaintiff also gave in-evidence a deed executed by Thomas- Smyth, Jun„ as attorney in fact of Basil-Jones, dated on •the 18th of 'November 1793, conveying, as such attorney, to William Patterson, the lessor of the plaintiff, certain-tracts of • land, and among others, the tract of seven thousand three lmndréd -acres; which deed .contained a recital that Basil Jones, by his certain writing or letter of attorney, dated the 6th of August 1793, did empower and authorise his said attorney in his, Basil Jones, name, to sell and' dispose of the tracts mentioned in the deed; which deed was recorded in the records of Franklin county, on the 25th of July 1795-.

Upon this evidence the plaintiff offered the copy as evidence in the cause. It was objected'to by the defendants, and the. objection was overruled by the court; and the copy was admitted in evidence to the jury. And this ruling of the court constitutes the first ground in the bill of exceptions, upon which the defendants now rely for a reversal of the judgment of the circuit court, -which was in favour of the plaintiff.

In the consideration of the . admissibility of the copy, two ■ questions are involved. -In the first place, whether there was sufficient evidence of the genuineness a'nd due execution of the original powerof attorney. - In the next-place, if its genu-, ineness-and due execution are established, whether the copy was, by the principles of law under all the circumstances, ad- ' missible proof.

In regard to the first question, we are to consider, that the original, instrument (supposing it to be'genuine) is of an ancient'date, having been executed in the year 1793, and recorded in the public records as a genuine instrument in 1795; so ‘-hat at the time of the-trial, it was forty years of age. Abram Jones, one of the subscribing witnesses, was long since dead ; and it does pot appear that Thomas Harwood, the other subscribing witness, was alive, or that'the plaintiff had any means of identifying him or tracing out his residence. The original power did not exist, so that the plaintiff could not, by an inspection of his handwriting,- ascertain who he was, or where lie lived.

After the lapse of thirty years from the time of the execution of' a deed, the witnesses are presumed to be dead ; and this is *675 •tlife common ground, in such cases, for dispensing with the production of them, without any search for them, or proof of their death, when the original deed is before the court for proof. It is a rule adopted for common convenience, and founded upon the great difficulty of proving the due execution of a deed after an interval of many years. And the rule applies not only to-grants of land, but to all .other deeds, where the instrument comes from the custody, of the proper party claiming under it, or entitled to its custody.- 1 Phillips on Evidence, ch. 8, sect. 2, p, 406, and cases there.cited; 1 Starkie on Evidence, part 2, sect. 143, 144, 145, and cases there cited. If, therefore, the original power-were now produced from the custody of the plaintiff, it would not be necessary to establish its due execution by the production of the subscribing witnesses. It would be sufficient to establish it by other proofs. This view, of the matter disposes of that part of the argument which denies that the proof of the original instrument. can be made without the production of the subscribing wit-, ness, Harwood, or accounting for his non production.

Then what is the'proof of the genuineness and due execution of.

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Bluebook (online)
34 U.S. 663, 9 L. Ed. 266, 9 Pet. 663, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winn-v-patterson-scotus-1835.