Rosamond v. M'Ilwain
Rosamond v. M'Ilwain
Opinion of the Court
was of a contrary opinion. Before the late act of assembly, which allows copies to be admitted in evidence, the grant itself was necessary to be produced; and if it had been produced without the plat to which it refers, for a description of the land, the court would consider it as a mutilated grant, and require the person claiming under it to shew how it had been mutilated. But, however, that might be, the act allows “ any copy of a plat and grant” to be given in evidence; in the case to which the provision applies. These copies are coupled together by a conjunctive conjunction in the .act, and seem both to be required in every case where either can be admitted,-as necessarily conjunct and co-incident. When the legislature admits, or requires any thing to be done, which could not be done, or was not before
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Rosamond v. Wm. M'Ilwain and others
- Status
- Published