Oldham v. Croghan
Oldham v. Croghan
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court. The petitioner states, that by an article of agreement entered into between him and George Croghan, it was stipulaled that in consideration of the labor of a gang of slaves placed on the plantation of Croghan, he would pay to the plaintiff the sum of four thousand and eighty dollars.
That the slaves mentioned in the agreement were put on the plantation and cultivated it during the stipulated time. That he has only received $2000, and some horses, and farming utensils in payment, and that certain persons now in possession of the plantation, the said Croghan, having clandestinely left the state, have taken possession of the property sold and delivered to him. He concludes by praying judgment for the balance that may be due him, and a writ of sequestration for the horses and farming utensils.
The defendant pleaded the general issue. George and Robert Bell, who were charged with having taken possession of the property sold to petitioner, denied that he had any
When the cause was on trial, the plaintiff offered in support of the allegations contained in his petition, an agreement between him and the defendant Croghan. The introduction of this document was objected to, on the ground that it had not been executed in duplicate. This objection was sustained by the court; upon which the plaintiff offered the deposition of a witness, to shew that the defendant had executed the agreement. The testimony was opposed, because it was proving a parol contract, when plaintiff had declared upon a written agreement; of this opinion also was the judge, and the plaintiff suffered a nonsuit, and appealed.
We think the judge erred. The objection made, seems to us to have mistaken entirely the nature of the proof offered; it was not as defendant stated, to prove a parol contract where a written one was declared on; but it was to prove, a written one had been executed, and the same declared on in the pleadings. On recurring to the petition to ascertain whe
We also think the judge erred in refusing to let the paper be read, although it was not executed in duplicate. Our code does not declare that acts under private signature, which contain synallagmatic agreements, are null, unless there be as many originals as there are parties, it states they shall not be valid. The proof of their not being void, results from another provision, which declares that if exec
We think therefore, that the instrument offered in the court below, as it was a writing signed by the defendant, and had emanated from him, might on general principles he used in evidence against him. And the question recurs whether there was any thing contained in the petition in this case, which deprived the plaintiff of the right of using it. The objection that has been made on this ground, supposes a degree of technicality in our proceedings, which our laws do not sanction. The statute merely requires a plaintiff to state
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the district court, be annulled, avoided and reversed, and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the cause be remanded, with directions to the district judge to admit the agreement offered by plaintiff as a commencement of proof in writing, and also to permit him to prove it was executed in part by the defendant, and that the appellee pay the costs of this appeal.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.