Judges: Boyxe
Filed Date: 11/19/1816
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
OPINION of the Court, by
This is an appeal taken by the defendant from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action of ejectment.
In the progress of Ihe trial in the court below, sundry exceptions' were taken by the defendant, the first of which presents the question whether a copy of the will of Thomas M’Gee, under which the plaintiff derives title, was admissible evidence or not ?
The objections to reading the copy as evidence were, 1st, that it was not sufficiently authenticated, being only certified by the clerk without the seal of the court, and net being otherwise proven to be a true copy ■ and 2dly, that the, will did not appear to have been admitted to record upon proof sufficient to pass real estate.
Both these objections, we are inclined to think, were corretctly overruled by the court below. With respect to the first, it may be remarked that at common law the seal of the court was not in all cases an indispensable requisite to authenticate a copy of its proceedings so as to render such copy admissible in evidence : for wherever an officer was entrusted by law to give out and authenticate copies, a copy certified by him was received without further evidence — Peak’s Ev. 31. And such we apprehend to be the case as respects the clerks of the courts of this country. We ara not indeed aware of any express statutory provision authorising them to give out copies and to authenticate them, but there are certainly many provisions which presuppose them to possess such an authority: of tli's sort are all those which prescribe the mode of making out’copies of records and regulating fees therefor. Besides, the invariable, and until very recently, the uncontroverted practice ever since the establishment of this government lias been to admit copies as evidence when duly certified and attested by the proper clerk.
As to the second objection, the record states that “ at a court held for Jefferson county on the 5th of August, 1783, the above will was proven and -admitted to record.” The fair conclusion from this statement ⅛ that the will was proven to have been executed according to its purport; and as it purports to have been executed in the presence of a competent number of subscribing wit-, »esses to pass real estate, we must presume that it was sg
As then the defendant must, in order to show7 his right •to make the objection, resort to other parts of the record, it necessarily follows that the plaintiff may in like manner do so for the purpose of answering the objection.
. It appears from the second bill of.exception taken in this case, that John M’Gee, the father of the lessor of the plaintiff, conveyed the land which is the subject of controversy, in fee with warranty to James M’Gee, who reconveyed in fee to John, .who afterwards conveyed the
The third bill of exception presents tw o points, growling out of the construction of the will of Thomas M’Gee 5 in which, after declaring his intention to make John M’Gee, the father of the plaintiff’s lessor, the manager of his whole affairs, to settle them right and just, as he willed them* proceeded to devise, amongst other things, 500 acres, part of a pre-emption, to his brother James M’Gee, and 500 acres, a part of the Same preemption, to the lessor of the plaintiff; but without dé-signating how their respective parts were to be ascertained. The points made by this bill of exception, are, 1st, that John M’Gee, the father Of the lessor of the plaintiff, had under the will power to allot to each his part; and that the conveyance by him of 500 acres before mentioned, to James M’Gee, was in substance art allotment of his part; and gdlyj'that if this point should be otherwise decided, then the lessor of the plaintiff had shown himself entitled to recover only an undivided moiety of the land in dispute.
As to the second point, there is no doubt if the estate which passed to the devisees by the will was, as we have supposed, an estate in common, that the lessor of the plaintiff could, according to the repeated decisions of this court, be entitled to recover only an undivided moiety, and not the whole in severalty. We are of opinion, therefore, that the court below erred in refusing to so instruct the jury.
Judgment must be reversed with costs, and the cause remanded for new proceedings not inconsistent with the foregoing opinion.