18 Barb. 203 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1854
It is stated in the bill of exceptions that the plaintiffs produced and read in evidence the second part of a deed, of lease and release from Ephraim Patter*
But whether the plaintiff had proved title in Ichabod Patterson or not was unimportant, after the defendants, as they did on the trial, set up a claim of title under him. By relying on him as a source of title, the defendants admitted he had title
The recital of the lease in the release was, after it appeared the defendants claimed under Ichabod Patterson, sufficient evidence of the lease. (Crane v. Lessee of Morris, 6 Peters, 59. Cowen & Hills Notes, 1235, 6, 7.) Besides, under the circumstances of this case, the execution and loss of the lease might properly be presumed.
The plaintiffs deduced title from Ichabod Patterson, and the defendants traced their paper title back to Benjamin Baton, and sought to prove that Patterson executed a deed to Baton in 1793, embracing the lands in question, which deed was lost. A witness on the part of the defendants testified, that he worked for Baton in his store and sold goods for him, and that Baton took a conveyance from Patterson in that year; that there had been
It is contended by the counsel for the defendants, that the negotiations and agreement for the conveyance of the land were competent evidence, as circumstances tending to show that a deed was given, and what its contents were. So far as the fact of the giving of a deed is concerned, the witness having testified to it directly and positively, the proof of the fact by this witness would not have been strengthened by receiving the evidence, ;
The declarations of Ephraim Patterson, after his conveyance* or descriptions in his conveyances of other lands, which were nothing more than mere declarations, could not affect the rights of persons claiming under him. Besides, such evidence was wholly irrelevant and immaterial upon the question as to the contents of the alleged lost conveyance of Ichabod Patterson to Eaton. And the same remark is applicable to the evidence offered of the payment of taxes by McCoy on the lands in dispute, the proceedings for the admeasurement of dower,
The exception to the charge is not sufficiently specific, to enable the defendants5 counsel to make the objections to it which are now insisted on. (Haggart v. Morgan, 1 Seld. 422.) But, I am satisfied, those objections are not well founded.
The first of the two propositions upon which the justice was requested to charge the jury, presents nothing material on which he did not charge in accordance with it. But, in respect to the other proposition, I have come to the conclusion that the instruction desired should have been given. I do not perceive that it contains any thing substantially erroneous. It certainly was not necessary, in order to prove the execution of the alleged lost deed, to prove by a witness that he remembered having seen a seal on it; the fact might be shown by other and circumstantial evidence; and evidence that the instrument was executed, and intended and purported to convey lands, and, in connection with it, of the declarations of Ichabod Patterson that he had conveyed his back lands to Eaton, was, I am satisfied, proper for the jury to pass upon, and I think it was sufficient to authorize them, if they believed it, to find that the instrument was under seal. The propriety of asking this instruction was apparent. The jury had been advised that the burthen of proof, to show a conveyance by Ichabod Patterson, lay on the defendants; that land could be conveyed only by deed, and that the deed must be under seal; and the necessity of a seal was in other parts of the charge prominently presented to the attention of the jury. The defendants’ counsel might well regard it of importance that the jury should be advised as to the
The result in the case might not have been affected by the instruction, if it had been given, but the court cannot see that it would not have been, and are not therefore at liberty to overlook the error.
A new trial must be granted, with costs to abide the event.
Johnson, T. R. Strong and Welles, Justices.]