1 Blackf. 218 | Ind. | 1822
Declaration in debt. Defendants pleaded, that after the commencement of the action, the plaintiff, by his writing obligatory,had released to the said defendants the debt in the declaration mentioned, together with the interest that had accrued thereon and the costs of suit; which release they could not produce in Court, it having been lost and destroyed hy accident. The plaintiff replied, that the release was not lost and destroy
This judgment is erroneous. The excuse given by the defendants, in their plea, for not making profert of the release, was traversable. See 1 Chitt. Pl. 349. — 3 T.R. 161. — 5 Bac. 432
The judgment is reversed, and the proceedings subsequent to the replication are set aside, with costs. Cause remanded, &c.
The general rule, where either party pleads a deed, is, to make profert of it as follows: — “Which said writing obligatory, (or indenture, &c.,) sealed with the seal of the said-, the said-now brings here into Court, the date whereof is the day and year aforesaid.” Steph. Pl. 439. To this rule there are some exceptions: as, where the deed remains in another Court; Co. Litt. 231; Wymark's case, fi Co. it. 74: — if it be in the possession of the opposite party; Wymark's case, supra: — if destroyed by fire; Leyfield's case, 10 Co. R. 92,93: — or, as in the text, if lost and destroyed by time and accident; Ready. Brookman, 3 T. R. 151., The last-cited case, says Ld. Ellenbomigh, goes a step further than the cases had gone before; and without saying that that step should be retraced, we ought not to go a step further, but stop there, Hendy v. Stephenson, 10 East, 5£. If the obligor fraudulently or innocently break oif the seal, the declaration averring that fact is good without profert. Cults v. U. States, 1 Gall. 69. Vide 1 Will. Saund. 9, n. 1. — 1 Chitt. Pl. 349. In these cases — when the deed is destroyed, &c__profert must not be made; Smith v. Woodward, 4 East, 585; but an excuse for not making it must be inserted in the pleading, according to the fact: thus, “And which said writing obligatory having been destroyed by fire, the said-cannot produce the same to the said Court here.” 2 Chitt. Pl. 197. If, however, in cases requiring profert, or an excuse for the omission, none be made, the defect can b a reached only by a special demurrer, Stat. 4 and 5 Anne, c, 16. — Ind, Stat. 1823, p. 298, — 1 Chitt. Pl. 350.