1 Port. 257 | Ala. | 1834
In this case, the bill was filed to carry into specific execution ante-nuptial articles between Carson and his wife. The bill sets out, and makes an exhibit of a copy of the articles ; alleging that the original is not in the possession or control of the complainant, and it prays that the defendants may be required to answer, “ Whether exhibit A is not a true copy of an original, which was executed, as it purports to be, and what has become of the original deed, of which the said exhibit A is a copy.” To this part of the bill, the defendants Howard, Foster, Mitchell, and Graham, answer — “ That the original articles, of which éxhibit A in the complainant’s bill purports to be a copy, has never been.in their possession, until procured from the office of the clerk of the County Court, on the 11th day of October, 1.825 and it is hereto attached, and prayed to be taken as a part of their answer ; the defendants further answering say, “ they are informed and believe said articles of marriage settlement was not executed until after the marriage of Thomas H. Y. Carson to Anitta Denson,” &c.
T. H. V. Carson, the husband, filed his separate answer admitting that the articles were executed in the manner, and at the date alleged in the complainant’s bill. There is no proof of the execution of the articles of the marriage contract. Nancy Denson, the mother of Mrs. Carson, who seems, from the exhibit A, to have been a subscribing witness, does not appear to have had the original before her, when her testimony was taken. She cannot, therefore, be received as proving the execution by the best evidence, and the absence of the original has not been accounted for in a way to let in such secondary evidence. In fact, the original seems to have been made an exhibit to, and a part of defendant’s answer. And it is difficult to conceive the reason why it was not shown to Mrs. Denson, at the time of taking her deposition.
The complainant having failed, as we believe, to prove the execution of the articles, so far as the defendants, Howard, Foster, Graham, and Mitchell are concerned, there should have been no decree against them; but as they have not ap