Doe ex dem. Smalley v. McKilvain

14 Ga. 252 | Ga. | 1853

By the Court.

Starnes, J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] We are of opinion that the Court below should have admitted the instrument tendered, as a grant from the State to Michael Smalley, after the evidence accounting for its mutilation.

Except as to the loss of the wax, and the impression of the Groat Seal thereon, the instrument seems to have had the appearance of being genuine. It was in all other respects regular and formal, and purported to be under the Great Seal of the State.

The plaintiff’s lessor, Andrew Scott, proposed to prove the existence of an original grant, such as was offered, by a copy from the Surveyor General’s office, which he tendered. He then accounted for the loss of the Seal, by stating upon oath, that he had received the instrument from Michael Smalley, the grantee, the Seal being absent therefrom; that he had made *254the most diligent inquiry of Michael Smalley, and was informed by him, that the same was lost or destroyed.

This seems to have been sufficiently exhausting the sources of information in endeavoring to account for the loss of the Seal; and after the above proof of the grant’s existence, and the loss of the Seal, according to the modern rules of evidence in such cases, wo think the Court might very properly have allowed the instrument to go as evidence to the jury.

This was not an alteration or change in the instrument, which might be supposed to be suggestive of fraud, or improper design. It was the probable result only of accident, or the wasting hand of time. In this view, it would seem the more reasonable, that upon such testimony, this instrument should have been submitted for what it purported to be, viz : a grant from the State. (1 Greenleaf Ev. 566.)

If the whole instrument had been so mutilated that it could not have been read in all its parts, or so that fragments were entirely lost, and the plaintiff had in the same way (as above stated) made proof of its original existence, that he had received it thus mutilated from the grantee; and that upon diligent inquiry he had learned from that grantee, that it was mutilated or destroyed by accident or time in his possession, there can be no doubt that the copy (which has no seal affixed) would have been received as good secondary evidence. If so, when the instrument has been mutilated by loss of the Seal only, and exactly similar proof is made, a fortiori, the instrument itself should be good evidence.

[2.] We think that the variance as to the name of the Secretary of the Executive Department should not have been allowed to influence this question.

This signature of the Secretary is altogether an immaterial feature of the grant. It is the signature of the Governor, and the Great Seal, which gives it effect and validity.

It is possible, that according to practice, one Secretary may have sometimes endorsed this memorandum of attestation upon the original grant, and another upon the register. However this may be, as in our opinion, the Secretary’s signature is en*255tirely immaterial, and as the two papers in this case entirely coincided in all other respects, the paper offered as the copy-grant might have been very well received as such, for the purpose for which it was offered.

Let the judgment he reversed.