Independence v. Pompton
Independence v. Pompton
Opinion of the Court
The Chief Justice delivered the opinion of the court.
This certiorari brings before us an order of the sessions of the *county of Warren, quashing an order of two [*212 justices of the peace for the removal of David Monroe and his wife and daughter, as paupers, from Independence to Pompton, and a case made by the sessions upon the determination of the appeal before them.
The counsel of Independence insisted in the sessions that David Monroe was settled by birth in the township of
The rule of evidence is thus stated by Starkie, in his recent and valuable treatise: “ Proof that a party was born in a particular parish is prima facie evidence of a settlement there. But it has been held that the declarations of deceased parents are not evidence as to the place of birth.” 3 Starkie 1319. The subject of hearsay evidence in settlement cases underwent great and thorough discussion in the case of Rex v. Friswell, 3 Term Rep. 707, and by that case the exclusion of such evidence as to matters not of mere pedigree has -been since considered as definitely settled. Such evidence was rejected in Rex v. Chadderton, 2 Fast 27, and'Lord Kenyon said, “The hearsay from the pauper’s mother is no evidence at all of any fact.” In Rex v. Ferry Frystone, 2 East, 53, evidence of the declaration of a pauper who was dead, and his examination in writing touching his place of settlement taken under oath before two justices, were both adjudged inadmissible.' In Rex v. Abergwilly, 2 East 63, a similar principle was decided. In Rex v. Erith, 8 East 539, the very question now before us was discussed in the King’s Bench. The court after time taken for consideration determined that the hearsay declaration of the father of a bastard child as to the place of his, the bastard’s birth, wms not competent evidence of that fact. The reasoning of Lord Ellenborough in delivering the opinion of the court on that occasion may stand in the stead of any further examination of the principle on our part. “ The only doubt,” he says, “which has been introduced into this case has arisen from improperly considering it as a question of pedigree. The controversy was not as in a case of pedi
The hearsay evidence in this case was properly rejected by the Court of Quarter Sessions.
The overseers of Independence then proved by David Monroe, that he recollected living _at Eingwood when he was so young that his mother used to lead him about by his hand, and that he remained at Eingwood until he was about ten years of age, when he began to drive a team of oxen and after that a team of mules; that after being thus employed about four years, he went into the state of New York.” No other evidence was given of the settlement, either of Monroe or of his parents. On the part of Independence it is insisted that here was sufficient evidence in point of fact, of the birth of the pauper in Pompton, and that the order of removal should therefore have been affirmed by the sessions. The question raised before us on this point by the counsel of Independence, is, that the sessions erred in matter of fact, not of law. Now it is a clear and well settled rule that this court on certiorari in settlement cases has no jurisdiction or control over the sessions in matters of fact or of the credibility of witnesses. The case in this instance made in the sessions is not properly stated. It should have set forth the fact of the place of birth, as found by the sessions, and not, as has been done, the mere evidence adduced to prove the fact. On this subject it is believed an inconvenient departure sometimes occurs from ancient and approved rule, and the occasion
In the case before us, although defectively stated, there is, I *apprehend, no difficulty in seeing the opinion [*215 of the sessions as to the fact; that the place of birth was not, in their estimation, proved to he in Pompton, because no other evidence, the case says, of the settlement of the pauper or his parents was given. It would therefore result only in useless expense to send back the case. It ought to be if a reasonable doubt existed as to the opinion of the sessions. For the rule of law is clear and unquestionable. The place of birth is tho place of settlement until another be shewn.
Let the order of the sessions be affirmed.
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