12 Wend. 173 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1834
By the Court,
I concede the rule insisted on by the counsel for the plaintiff below, to the fullest extent, borne out by the authorities, and they are numerous ; and still am of opinion that the plaintiff did not give such proof of the loss of the note as to justify the secondary proof of its contents, or to entitle him to resort to the original consideration. If there had been satisfactory proof of the loss or destruction of the note, the omission to give a bond of indemnity under the statute, 2 R. S. 406, § 75, 76, would not have interfered with the recovery; for the provision of the statute on this subject is limited to negotiable paper. There is no evidence that the note in question was negotiable, and it seems to be settled that the court will not presume a lost note to be negotiable. 10 Johns. R. 104. 3 Wendell, 344.
The proof is, that the plaintiff deliberately and voluntarily destroyed the note before it fell due, and there is nothing in the case accounting for, or affording any explanation of the act, consistent with an honest or justifiable purpose.
In Leyfield’s case Lord Coke gives the obvious reasons why the deed or instrument in writing should be produced in court, 1. To enable the court to give a right construction to it from the words; 2. To see that there are no material erasures or interlineations; 3. That any condition, limitation, or power of revocation, may be seen ; for these reasons oyer is required in pleading a deed. But he says, in great and notorious extremities, as by casualty of fire, &c. if it shall appear to the judges that the paper is burnt, it may be proved by witnesses so as not to add affliction to affliction.
' From the necessity and hardship of the case, courts have allowed the party to be a competent witness to prove the loss or destruction of the papers ; hut it would be an unreasonable indulgence, and a violation of the just maxim, that no one shall take advantage of his own wrong, to permit this testimony, where he has designedly destroyed it.
Judgment reversed.