32 Pa. 539 | Pa. | 1859
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It sometimes happens that, where rules and principles have long ceased to be controverted, their very existence is lost sight of, or it comes to be believed that, in the mutations of time and things, they too have fallen beneath this same irresistible power. It is the duty of courts to reclaim them, alike from innovations, and the efflux of time. Rules of evidence are the avenues to truth, and they should be followed. They are none the less to be respected because venerable from age. We think a well settled rule was lost sight of in the present ease.
For certain purposes, indicated by certain Acts of Assembly, transcripts of justices of the peace, merely certified to officially,
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.