Selin v. Snyder
Selin v. Snyder
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
[After stating the facts on the first point.] The reason .offered by thesdefendants’ counsel, against this evidence is, that the law, having entrusted Frederick Evans, a justice of the peace, with authority to take the acknowledgment of deeds, and he having certified, that Mary Kendig did acknowledge this deed before him, his certificate cannot be contradicted. But that question does. not arise, because Mary Kendig did not contradict the certificate. She confesses that she acknowledged the deed, but was sorry that she ever' signed it. This was what the plaintiffs wanted to prove. It was material for them to show, that although Mary Kendig executed the deed, and acknowledged it, yet she was never satisfied with the sale to Selin. I am of opinion therefore, that the evidence was properly received. There was another objection, .not to the answer, but to the interrogatory itself as being a leading one. The interrogatory might have been put in a more unexceptionable manner. Did you or did you not, ever acknowledge the deed l” &c.
The 4th question proposed to Mary Kendig, and her answer, are also objected to. Question, “ Were you, or not, ever consulted about applying to the Orphans* Court, to have an order to sell the land, or did you ever consent to the sale ?” Answer.—“ I was never asked to apply to the Orphans’ Court, for the sale of the land in question, nor did I ever consent to have it sold.” It appears by the record of the Orphans’ Court, that Mary Snyder, (before her marriage with Kendig,) John Miller, and Simon Snyder, presented a petition for the sale of the land of John Snyder, in order to pay his debts, and that after the land had been sold to Selin, John Kendig and Mary his wife, (late widow Snyder,) John Miller and Simon Snyder, made a report of their proceedings to the Court, by whom the sale was confirmed. It is expressly stated on the record, that Kendig and wife, (late Mary Snyder,) John Miller, and Simon Snyder, administrators of John Snyder, deceased, came into Court and prayed, &?c. So that the evidence is in direct contradiction of the record. The Orphans’ Court were acting withm their jurisdiction. They had power to receive, and to grant the petition for a sale of John Snyder’s land, and therefore what is averred on the record cannot be contradicted. The sale may be avoided, if unfairly made, but the assertion in the record, that the parties appeared in Court, must be taken for absolute verity.
Exceptions were also taken in the Court below, to the admission of the depositions of Daniel Witmer, and Peter Gonter. These depositions were taken ex parte, under a rule of Court. The plaintiffs gave notice to Simon Snyder, that the depositions would be taken, “at the house of Adam Weaver, Innkeeper in the borough of Lancaster, on Tuesday 1st August, at 10 o’clock in the morning.” The depositions were taken, on the day appointed, before Paul Zantzinger, a justice of the peace for the county of Lancaster; but it does not appear where they were taken, except that they were taken in the county of Lancaster. This is a fatal defect. It is incumbent on the party who offers a deposition in evidence, to prove that it was taken according to notice, unless the adverse party attended, in which case any defect of notice is cured. When this notice was served on Mr. Snyder, he was sick, and he did not attend at the taking of the depositions. The defendant might have proved, by parol evidence, that the depositions were taken according to the terms of the notice,
J udgment reversed and a venire facias de nono awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Selin and others against Snyder and others
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published