15 Wend. 425 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836
Lead Opinion
The Opinion of the Court was delivered by the Chief Justice as follows: It was objected, on the trial, that the deed from the defendant to the plaintiff should not be given in evidence, because oyer had not been given of the certificate of acknowledgment endorsed upon it. The objection was properly overruled. The certificate of acknowledgment or proof of the instrument constitutes no part of the deed itself.
Baker was a competent witness. He had no interest in "this cause; his credibility was before the jury. The jury were satisfied that there was no collusion betwen him and the plaintiff, and I cannbt say that their verdict is against evidence. That was a question for the jury, and their decision Should not be disturbed fexcept in a clear case.
New trial denied-.
The following dissénting opinion was delivered by Mn Justice BronsOn :
Dissenting Opinion
dissented. It has never been decided that á parol notice was sufficient-, in a cáse like the present, andlaih
In Gilbert v. The Columbia Turnpike Co. 4 Johns. Cas. 107, the court say that “ a notice in legal proceedings means a written noticeand it was one of the grounds on which the proceedings were quashed, that it did not appear that the
Whatever may be the rule in relation to warranties on the sale of chattels, I think it against legal analogies, and utterly unsafe in practice to give any effect to a verbal notice of this kind in an action for the recovery of real estate. Without examining the other questions made on the trial, I am of opinion that the notice was insufficient, and that the verdict ought therefore to be set aside..