4 Ill. 532 | Ill. | 1842
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an action of debt to recover the penalty given by “An Act to prevent trespassing by Cutting Timbes-,”
This rule is doubtless applicable to this action, which, although a penal one, is a remedy given to the owner, for a permanent injury to his estate. In the absence of proof of this character, raising a presumption of title, the party asserting title, is bound by the general rule that he must produce the best evidence the nature of the case will admit of. The best evidence is his deeds and ■other documentary evidence of title. These -are always presumed to be in his custody, and can be easily produced. He makes an affirmative allegation, having in his control the highest evidence to substantiate it, and it is but reasonable that he should be required to produce it. 1
But it is contended that the admission of the party who has the right to compel his antagonist thus to make out his case, dispenses with the necessity of producing the best evidence of title. Where the admission is made for the purposes of the trial, it is regarded as a stipulation of the party making it, that the fact about which it is made exists, and he is estopped from denying it. But an admission made in jpais is not conclusive, and is entitled to no higher consideration than parol testimony. It amounts but to oral testimony, and is liable to be rebutted by the party making it. It is regarded as the weakest and most uncertain kind of testimony, and ought to be received only in cases where parol evidence is properly admissible to show the same fact.
In the case of Summersett v. Adamson,
In Jenner v. Joliffe,
The case of Hasbrouck v. Baker,
In the Welland Canal Company v. Hathaway,
These cases are similar in principle to the one before us, and fully settle the question involved. The admission is excluded, because there is higher evidence of the fact in issue.
The rule properly deducible from the authorities, seems to be, that the admission of the party is competent evidence, only where parol evidence would be admissible to establish the same fact, or 'where there is not higher and more conclusive evidence in existence, which can be produced. Indeed, the Court in The Welland Canal Company v. Hathaway, lay it down as an undeniable proposition. Such too, is stated to be the proper rule, by Mr. Greenleaf, in his excellent Treatise on Evidence, page 235.
The propriety of the rule is manifest. It is consistent with the-well established principle, that the best evidence which the nature' of the case permits, shall be furnished. It imposes no hardship on the party who seeks to introduce the admission, for he can resort to the higher grade of evidence which is in his control, and more easily produced by him, than his adversary. A different rule would substitute for the most certain and conclusive testimony, the loose declarations and vague admissions of a party, not made under the sanction of an oath, or with any reference to a decision by a judicial tribunal of the matter, concerning which they were made. Instead of eliciting the truth, the sole object of evidence, it would have the tendency to obscure and exclude it. It would prove a source of much inconvenience to, and frequently operate as a great hardship on, the party making the admission. To rebut it he would generally have to prove a negative, a matter always difficult, and in many cases almost if not wholly impossible. He may have no means of ascertaining the truth, the whole of the evidence pertaining to it, being in the control of his adversary.
In the present case, if the admission was competent evidence, Mason, to avoid its effect, would be compelled to show title out of the plaintiff, and this he could only do by showing title in some other person. To establish this, he might be required to produce title papers beyond his control, and of the existence of which he had no knowledge. If the admission was untrue, and he failed to> show its falsity, the recovery against him would be no bar to an action by the real owner.
In this view, the decision of the Court in refusing the instruction asked for, was erroneous.
For this error the judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed with costs.
Wilson, Chief Justice, dissented.
Judgment reversed.
Semple, Justice, did not hear the argument in this case, and gave no opinion.
R. L. 602; Gale’s Stat. 679.
3) Ante 258.
Ricard v. Williams, 7 Wheat. 59; The People v. Leonard, 11 Johns. 504; Day et al. v. Alverson, 9 Wend. 223.
1 Bing. 73.
Wend. 480.