14 Ala. 404 | Ala. | 1848
This was an action of assumpsit brought by the defendant in error against McGehee. The declaration contains only the common counts. By a bill of exceptions sealed at the trial, it appears the plaintiff below read to the jury anote signed by William M. McGehee, Abner Mc-Gehee, Joel A. Stokes, and the parties to this suit, for $1,800, dated May 19, ’40, and payable to the Branch of the Bank of the State of Alabama at Montgomery. It was shown that William McGehee was the principal in the note, and the other four persons named were his securities. That William
To prove the agreement to indemnify, the plaintiff offered in evidence a certified copy of a bill in chancery, filed by Albert against Abner McGehee in the chancery court, purporting to be sworn to, the register of said chancery court certifying that it was a full and correct copy of .the bill. This was objected to by the defendant. Waiving the question, whether a general objection to the evidence, without specifying any specific ground upon which it is based, can be regarded other than as an objection to its relevancy, we think the testimony thus offered was admissible in any view in which it has been presented to us in this court. Conceding that when records are exemplified, the general rule is, the whole must be exemplified, that the court may be able to construe it from a view of the whole record taken together, (1 Phil. Ev. 395,) and still, the rule would not exclude the bill in the present case ; for we are not advised that there is any answer or other proceeding in the court of chancery save the bill. But if the bill had been answered, it is manifest the answer could not have been evidence, and the only ■ '•ffect of the bill as evidence, was, to prove the admissions ,r'.?ruer oath, of the defendant. 1 Greenl. Ev. 556. This court has decided, that before the completion of the final record, the original papers may be given in evidence, as, till then, they compose a quasi record, and we see no reason why an exemplified copy of the papers may not be evidence in all cases where the original papers, as a record, could be read. Such has been the practice, to receive exemplified copies of the original papers, while the proceedings are in fi-eri, and before the final record is completed, and we think there is no rule of law which forbids it. The copy of the bill being read, for the purpose of showing the admissions of the defendant, was the whole of the record which concerned
In Ansley v. Carloss, 9 Ala. R. 973, this court held, that while the cause is progressing the papers are quasi records, and until the final • record is made, the papers, &c. in the cause are evidence, and the best evidence of the facts they import. In Woodward v. Harbin, 1 Ala. R. 104, it was held, a certified copy of an execution returned into court was admissible in evidence. These authorities are sufficient to show, that the bill in this case was very properly admitted.
It is further a clear proposition of law, that if Smith paid the money to Abner McGehee, which he now seeks to recover from the plaintiff in error, in his own wrong, or, in
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.