2 Johns. 451 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1807
delivered the opinion of the court. The judgment below is supposed to be erroneous, because the justice admitted proof of the confession, by the maker of the note, when it was shown to him, that he had given if.
It appears, indeed, to be a technical rule in the English courts, not to allow the confessions of the party tobe evidence of the execution of sealed instruments, but to require the attendance of the subscribing witness, unless it appear that he cannot be procured.
Judgment affirmed.
Doug. 216 217. Abbot v. Plumbe.
Doug. 216.