Morrison v. Meacham
Morrison v. Meacham
Opinion of the Court
The evidence is not sufficient to authorize a decree for the plaintiff, in opposition to the answer, which peremtorily denies the execution of any such bond, or the existence of any debt whatever. Without stopping to consider, whether any proof of the loss of the bond is .necessary upon the hearing, and admitting some to be requisite, it seems pretty certain, that very slight.evidence answers on that point; and we should be satisfied with that before us, supposing it, however, to be first admitted or established, that the bond once actually subsisted, which it is alleged has been lost. Upon that question there is nothing in the nature of the jurisdiction of a Court of Equity, when the answer denies that there was a bond, to dispense with the degree of proof, which a Court of law would call for, to be laid before a jury on non est factum pleaded to a declaration on a lost bond. As the declaration would have to aver the sealing of the ■obligation, and identify it by its date, day of payment, .and the sum mentioned in it, so the proof would have to come up to that description. Upon evidence so vague as not to fix any date, day of payment, or certain sum mentioned in it, and leaving it doubtful whether the instrument was a bond or note, a verdict could not be expected for the plaintiff on such declaration. Much less can a decree here, since the defendant’s answer is by the rules of equity evidence for him. Here no date or day of payment is specified by either witness; One of them is
Bill dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JOHN MORRISON v. JAMES MEACHAM
- Status
- Published