Bright v. Young
Bright v. Young
Opinion of the Court
The main ground relied upon by the plaintiffs in error to reverse this cause, is the admission of secondary evidence of the contents of a mortgage deed executed by J. and R. G. Young to them. This deed, which was executed and delivered to them, and which remains unsatisfied, the law presumes to be in their custody, and it was their duty, if they apprehended any injury from an imperfect description of it by witnesses, or from the introduction of a copy, to have produced the original.
It further appears, that some twelve months anterior to the trial, a notice had issued and was served upon Mr. Shorter, to whose management, as an attorney, the cause had been transferred by Mr. Storrs, to produce said mortgage on the trial. The same not having been produced, a certified copy from the record of the county court was allowed to be read. ■
The rule requires a party to adduce the best evidence of the fact to be proved, of which the nature of the case admits, and which is in his power to produce. In the case before us, the mortgage deed was made to the plaintiffs in error. They were the mortgagees, and it is clear from the proof, that the deed became operative by delivery. The law then, in the absence of other proof, presumes them tobe in possession of it. Rex v. Leicester, 1 Bar. & Ald. 173; 3 Phil. Ev. 1187, n. 837, and cases there cited. The notice given the attorney who was then managing the cause for the plaintiffs, to produce the deed on the trial, described the deed, and was sufficient; it operated as notice upon the plaintiffs, and upon the attorney who subsequently came into the cause. Clay’s Dig. 337, & 137; 1 Mood. & Rob. 242. Reasonable diligence is all the law requires the defendant to exercise in order to procure the better testimony. We think the diligence disclosed by the record altogether sufficient in this case. In order to establish the instrument, and procure its production, the defendant examined one of the plaintiffs in the action. Finding by the answer of the plaintiff, that the deed was in possession of Col. Storrs, he is next examined, but he had
It is true, as insisted upon by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that the execution of the instrument must be proved, notwithstanding secondary evidence of its contents may be allowed. In this case, however, the subscribing witness was examined, and although he cannot speak of the contents, not having read it or heard it read, still he deposes to certain facts, which may properly go to the jury as identifying and establishing the copy offered from the records of the county court as being correct. When a deed is not produced after notice, and it is shown to have been under the control of the adverse party, the court will be liberal in the application of the rule which allows secondary evidence, and so applyit as to promote the ends of justice. So it is held, that where no direct testimony on the point of execution or former existence of an instrument is attainable, the fact may be proved by circumstances. Gillespey v. Woolsey, 1 Johns. Rep. 446. So also, where a deed to land was lost, and the witness who testified as to its existence remembered that there were subscribing witnesses to it, but did not know their names, and it not appearing that the party seeking to establish the deed had the means of knowing them, held he might prove the deed by the acknowledgments of the opposite party. 7 Wend. 125. The proof made by Ool. Storrs was relevant, and properly submitted to the jury in connection with the copy from the register of deeds. Whether it sufficiently proves and identifies the copy, was a question for the jury. In such cases, although the proof may be vague and uncertain as to dates, sums, &c., every intendment and presumption are against the party who might make the whole matter plain by producing the deed. 3 Phil. Ev. 1192.
The plaintiffs, having failed to produce the deed in accordance with the notice, they cannot object that they were not
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BRIGHT & LEDYARD v. YOUNG
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