Ware v. Roberson

18 Ala. 105 | Ala. | 1850

CHILTON, J.

Roberson, the, defendant in error, having o.btained a judgment against Ware, before a justice of the peace of, Talladega county, for $29 T°7\, the, latter.su,ed out a wrft of certiorari and removed the proceedings.Juto the Circuit Court-, of that county. It was agreed that the case should be tried in the Circuit Court, as upon proper issues in an action of assumpsit.

The witnesses on the part of Roberson proved that they heard the defendant. Ware, say, in 1848, that he had traded to , Roberson a note for $20 on Polly Harcrow, in 1843; that, he, had not warranted the solvency of the note, bat that, at the time . of the negotiation, he agreed to pay the note, if any legal set-offe . existed against it; that Ware afterwards stated if Roberson had given him notice of a suit brought upon the note in the name . of Ware for his use against the maker, he could have disproved the defence relied on by her in that suit, but that he did not hear of said suit until the night before the trial, when his engagements in working upon the public road prevented his attending.. Ware also stated in the same conversation that the plaintiff Robinson, ought to have his money, if he had not already got it— hgt.it was just for hi ip to hayej.t, but denied that there were any *107legal set-offs against the note, as well as his liability to pay it, and protested that he would not pay it.

The plaintiff then offered in evidence a petition for a writ of certiorari, sworn to by Ware on the 10th February 1849, setting forth that on the 3d of August, 1848, suit was instituted on said note against the maker in his name for the use of Roberson before a justice of the peace in Randolph county, and that judgment was thereupon rendered against the plaintiff in said suit, for $4 81-j cost, on the 14th October, 1848, upon a plea of set-off: That petitioner had transferred, said note to said Roberson, and that there was no valid set-off against the same at the time the judgment was rendered, and not knowing at the time what the decision, of the justice was, or whether Roberson would take an appeal, and being injuriously affected by the judgment, he prayed the removal of the same to the Circuit Court of Randolph, upon certiorari, and that a supersedeas issue &c. The counsel for Ware objected to that portion-of the petition which showed that a judgment had been rendered in Randolph on the note upon the plea of set-off, insisting that the contents of the judgment could not be proved by the admissions contained in the petition, but that the judgment, or the justice’s docket, should be produced, or its absence duly accounted for. The court refused to exclude any portion of the petition from the jury, and likewise refused to charge that the statements in the petition were not sufficient proof of a judgment as therein stated. The foregoing was all the proof that was made in the cause. The court below refused to charge the jury that the admissions contained in the petition did not dispense with the production of the written evidence of the proceedings before the justice of the peace, and of the note upon which the suit before the justice was instituted.

We have looked through the books in vain for a precedent to justify us in affirming this case, and to-sanction the ruling of the primary court as to the admission of parol evidence of the contents of the judgment, note, &c., in the justice’s office. The petition is certainly parol evidence, and could not have dispensed with the production of the higher or better evidence, unless it comes within some exception to the. general rule. It is laid down generally that the admission of a party out of court will, not supply the place of a record. — Jenner v. Joliffe, 6 Johns. R. *1089. So it has been held that the confession of a party, that he had been served with a subpcena, does not dispense, in an action against him. for non attendance, with the production of the subpoena. — Hasbrouck v. Baker, 10 Johns. R. 249. In the Willand Canal Company v. Hathway, 8 Wend. R. 480-486, it is said, “It may be laid down as an undeniable proposition, that the admissions of a party are competent evidence against himself, only in cases where parol evidence would be admissible to establish the same facts, or in other words, where there is not in the judgment of the law higher and better evidence to be produced. It would be a dangerous, innovation upon the rules of evidence to give any greater effect to. confessions or admissions of a party, unless in open court, and the tendency would be to dispense with the production of the most solemn documentary evidence.” — See also, Dutchess Cotton Manufacturing Co. v. Davis, 14 Johns. R. 238; 3 Phil. Ev. (C. & H. notes,) 277. The same principle has also received the sanction of this court, in the case of Morgan v. Patrick & Smith, 7 Ala. 185.

In the case before us, the policy of the rule is manifest. The petition says the former judgment in favor of the maker of the note against Ware, as the nominal plaintiff, was upon a plea of set-off, but whether this plea embraced cross demands existing ¡against Ware, the nominal plaintiff, or against the party for whose use the suit was brought, we are not advised. The proceedings themselves would in all probability remedy the difficulty. At all events the justice’s docket, and the note itself, on which the liability is sought to be established, are better and higher evidence, and should not be proved by secondary parol evidence, unless their pioduction is rendered impracticable. Let the judgment he reversed and the cause remanded.