Helm v. Eastland
Helm v. Eastland
Opinion of the Court
OPINION of the Court, by
This was an action of covenant upon a deed alleged tobe lost by some misfortune, orto have been taken by fraud out of the plaintiff’s possession by some person unknown.
Upon the issue of non est factum, the plaintiff had a verdict and judgment 5 from which the defendant appealed to this court.
The first objection taken on the part of the appellant questions the propriety of the remedy at law upon a deed lost or destroyed by casualty.
Hie rules which define the rights and obligations of individuals are for the most part founded upon principles of moral justice, which are immutably and universally the same : but those which prescribe the courts in which rights shall be enforced or wrongs redressed, atul the modes of action and of defence, are, and of necessity must be mere creatures of positive law, differing in tit fit rent countries and ages of the world. It is at 3 single view evident that the moral right to demand payment is in no degree affected by the inevitable loss or destruction of the instrument evidencing that right; but it by no means follows that such an event would not operate to change the remedy or the tribunal which is to administer it ; these not depending, like the right to demand payment, upan the immutable principles of inoiui equity. Whether in any, and in what cases a change of remedy is produced by the destruction of the instrument from casualty, will be illustrated by a consi-iici.iuon of the modes of relief and of defence which ihc law affords upon contracts of different species.
For the purpose we have in view, contracts or agree‘ments may be reduced to two classes; 1st. simple contracts, and 2dly. contracts by specialty. The former ■''embraces verbal agreements, and such as are reduced to writing without having the solemnity of a seal. The circumstance of being reduced to writing adds no validity or efficacy to the agreement, exceptas it renders it more certain and facilitates its proof. The writing does not constitute the basis of the action ; it is not necessary to make proferí »f it in declaring, nor is the defendant ett-tiiicd to oyer ; and the plaintiff is bound, except in actions upon mercantile instruments, to aver and prove a
The other species of agreement is in many respects widely different. A specially is a contract executed with ¡he solemnities of sealing ami delivery, and is emphatically styled a eked. In contemplation of law it possesses the attributes of dignity and verity in a preeminent degree. Suitably to this high, but factitious character with which the iaw has invested it, peculiar forms of action and solemnities of proceeding are required. None but debt or covenant will lie upon it. It constitutes the basis of the action without reference to the consideration, and the defendant cannot deny the debt or demand, without denying the deed which creates it. In declaring upon it, the plaintiff must make pro-ferí of it, tint the court may see that it is duly executed, and whether it be absolute, conditional or revocable ; and the defendant is entitled to demand oyer, not as a nacre rule of practice, but as a matter of right in law.
The high remedy which the law has given, and the solemn forms of proceeding it has required to be had on a deed, are evidently predicated upon that factitious dignity ivhich in legal contemplation it possesses. Whenever, therefore, any occurrence takes place that destroys that dignity, the law (and surely very consistently with itself) withholds the remedy it gives only on account of the solemnity of the instrument. Thus it is laid down in Gilb. Law of Ev. p. 108, “ that if a man claims a title to a thing lying in agreement, he fails if the seal be torn off from his deed ; for a man cannot shew a title to a thing lying in solemn agreement but by solemn agree ment, and there cáo be no solemn agreement without a, seal.” And again says the same venerable author, “ where a contract creates an obligation, it cannot be pleaded if the seal be torn off; for the seal is the essential part of the deed, and without a seal it is no longer a deed, nor to be pleaded, or given in evidence as a deed.
Where the plaintiff' avers that the deed is destroyed, non est factum, being in the present tense, forms no is-sise ; it is but a denial of that which is not affirmetij. hai-which in. fact is alleged
But again. The necessity of a proferí in an action at law upon the dsed is abundantly proven by the authorities cited in the argument — See Co. Lit. 35 b, 5 Co. Rep. 74, 6 Co. Rep. 456, 3 Atk. 214. Nor will the necessity of proferí be avoided by an averment that the deed is lost or destroyed — See 10 Co. Rep. 92, 2 Atk. 61, and Metcalf vs. Standiford
That the defendant is entitled to oyer as a matter of right, and that it cannot be dispensed with, although the deed is proven to be lost or destroyed, is also clearly shewn by the cases relied upon in the argument — -See 2 Stra. 1186, 1 Mod. 266, 1 Wils. Rep. 16, 1 Tidd’s Prac. 527-8. These forms and solemnities of proceeding are evidently founded upon the continued existence of the deed with all those attributes which give to ⅛ its high factitious character; and that they cannot be dispensed with although the deed be lost or destroyed, conclusively shews that the remedy is thereby lost at law. In such case, however, the party is not without a remedy, a court of equity having an acknowledged and incontestable jurisdiction. A court of equity gives relief not only where a discovery is sought, but where none is wanted. As a court of chancery was established to supply the defects of law, and to give relief where it was denied at law but where justice required it, the jurisdiction of that court in the case of a deed lost or destroyed by casualty very forcibly demonstrates that a court of common law does not afford a remedy in such case.
We are not unapprised that by alat&decision in England the courts of common law there have assumed a concurrent jurisdiction in cases of this kind with the courts of equity : but that decision is not authority here, and appears to us to be sot only unwarranted upon prin-
judgment reversed, &c.
1 P'
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.