Bryan v. Farnsworth
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Bryan v. Farnsworth
Opinion of the Court
By the Court.
To prove the judgment of the justice of the peace of DeKalb county, Illinois, upon which action was brought, the plaintiff offered in evidence what purported to be a transcript thereof, to which the following
Ttler K. Waite, (scroll,) Justice of the Peace.”
“ I, Wallace M. Moore, clerk of the county court in and for the county aforesaid, do hereby certify, that at the time of the several dates of the docket entries, summons and execution, copied in the foregoing transcript, Abram Conant, Esq., whose name as acting justice of the peace, in and for the county of DeKalb and state of Illinois, duty elected and qualified, and that Tyler K. Waite, Esq., whose name is subscribed to the annexed certificate to said transcript, was at the time of executing the same, an acting justice of the peace in and for said
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my'hand and affixed the seal of the said county court, this 14th day of October, A. D. 1870.
[Official Seal.] . Wallace M. More, Clerk.”
Which evidence was admitted by the justice before .whom the case was tried, the defendant’s objections thereto being overruled.
The action of the justice was affirmed- in the district court upon the ground that the evidence was admissible under Gen. Stat., ch. 73, sec. 80.
This reads as follows: “An exemplification of a judgment rendered by any justice of the peace, in any state or territory of the United States, officially certified by such justice as a full and correct copy of all the proceedings in that case from his docket, with a certificate of magistracy thereon, signed and authenticated by a clerk of a court of •record in the county where such judgment was rendered, with the seal thereof attached, is evidence in any court in this state to prove the facts contained in such exemplification.”
It is admitted that this transcript does not fall within the terms of the statute. It is said, however, to be within its spirit, for to give a literal interpretation to statutes of this kind would make it impossible in any case to procure a transcript from the docket of a deceased justice. If there were, no other way of proving the fact of the rendition of such a judgment,' a very different question .might present
The act of congress, May 26, 1790, provides, that exemplifications of the record and judicial proceedings of the courts of any state shall be admitted in evidence in any other court within the United States, by the attestation of the clerk, and the seal of the court annexed, if there be a seal, together with a certificate of the judge that the attestation is in due form. Mr. G-reenleaf states, upon the authority of Thomas v. Tanner, 6 Monroe, 52, that if the court itself is extinct, but its records and jurisdiction have been transferred by law to another court, it seems that the clerk and presiding judge of the latter tribunal are competent to make the requisite attestation. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 506.
The Rev. Stat. of Mass. ch. 94, s. 57, (with which Genl. Stat., ch. 73, s. 49 is identical,) also provides, that the records and judicial proceedings of any court of another state, or of the United States, shall be admissible in evidence in all cases in this state, when authenticated by the attestation of the clerk, prothonotary, or other officer having charge of the records of such court, with the seal of such court annexed. In a case falling within the provisions of these two statutes, the court, in Capen v. Emery, held that there could be no doubt but that when the court in which judgment was rendered had been
But as the court of this justice of the peace was not a court of record, the provisions of the act of congress do not apply. (1 Greenl. Ev. § 505.) Neither, and for the same reason, does Gen. Stat., ch. 73, § 49, aforesaid.
The question, therefore, whether or not the certificate of Justice Waite is prima facie evidence that he was the proper custodian of the docket and papers of the deceased justice, does not arise ; for, granting that it were, there is no statute of this state which makes an exemplification of the judgment of a deceased justice certified by him, evidence. The evidence having been improperly admitted, it is unnecessary to consider the questions raised as to its effect.
It may be remarked, however, that whether or not the law is, as the respondents contend, that when an exemplified copy of a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace in another state is offered, and it alleges in terms that the party was personally served with process, this allegation cannot be controverted, the fact, nevertheless, that such was the law would be no justification whatever for the striking out, before trial, of the third paragraph of defendant’s answer, viz.: “ that no process was ever served upon the defendants in the action mentioned in the complaint; and that he never in any manner appeared, either in person or by attorney, in said action.”
Conceding, then, (though as to this we give no opinion,) that the action of the plaintiffs was not effectual to dismiss the action in the district court, and it was therefore still pending, this does not support the defendant’s first defense aforesaid, viz.: that said judgment was still in full force.
Eor the error above indicated, in admitting said transcript in evidence, the judgment appealed from is reversed.
Reference
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- Orlando M. Bryan v. Chandler Farnsworth
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