8 Wend. 480 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1832
That the plaintiffs, must, at the trial, proves themselves duly incorporated by competent authority, on the plea of the general issue, is not to be contested at this day in this court, 19 Johns. R. 300 ; 1 Wendell, 555 : this is conceded by the counsel for the plaintiffs, but it is contended that the receipt of the defendant and his contract with the agent of the company ought to estop him from denying their legal existence ; or at least are prima facie evidence of that fact, subject to be rebutted. There is a dictum of Ch. J. Thompson, in the Dutchess Cotton Manufactory v. Davis, 14 Johns. R. 245, which is relied on by the plaintiffs. In that case there was a demurrer to some of the counts in the declaration, and one of the causes assigned was the want of an averment that the plaintiffs were a body corporate, duly organized in pursuance of the law, which the learned judge was considering when the opinion was pronounced. The remark, therefore, “ The defendant having undertaken to enter into a contract with the plaintiffs in their corporate name, he thereby admits them to be duly constituted a body politic and corporate under such name,” was not necessary to the point under consideration. The case of Henriques v. The Dutch West India Company, 2 Ld. Raym. 1535, was there cited, and is relied upon in this case as an authority for the plaintiffs. Upon examination, I think it will be found rather favoring the defendant’s position. The Dutch West India Company sued Henriques in the C. B. in England, for money borrowed of them in Holland, and recovered. See the ease before the C. B. on questions reserved at the trial by Ld. Ch. J. King, 1 Str. 608. From this report it appears that the cause went to the K. B. and House of Lords, and was affirmed. From the case in Ld. Raymond it appears that a scire facias was brought in the C. B. against the bail of Henriques in the
But it is said that the defendant, by his contracts with the company, has admitted that they are a body corporate, duly constituted by law. I cannot assent to this position. The evidence proves that he has contracted with the agent of an association denominating themselves the Welland Canal Company, and nothing more. Whether they were incorporated by competent authority, or if incorporated, what were the legal capacities, are not admitted by him. To justify the inference
I am also of opinion the evidence relied upon by the plaintiffs was incompetent to prove that they were a corporate body, duly constituted by law. It was not the best evidence which the nature of the case admitted of. A copy of the charter of the company properly, authenticated should have been produced, and nothing short of this can be admissible, unless the absence of such record evidence is legally accounted for to the court; at best, the proof relied upon is but the admission of the defendant, (I do not believe it amounts to that.) The testimony, therefore, is inferior in degree to that which the court must know exists in the case. I am not aware of any principle in the law of evidence which will authorize us to substitute the declarations of a party, even as against himself, for record or written evidence, and thereby dispense with its production. Such admissions rank only with oral testimony, and are entitled to no higher consideration in deciding upon the competency of evidence. It may be laid down, I think, 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 arid better evidence in existence 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 testimony. The principle for which I am contending has been decided by this court. In Jenner v. Joliffe, 6 Johns. R. 9, there was an attempt to prove the existence of legal proceedings in Quebec, by the confession of the party. Thompson, J. says, “ The confessions of a party have never
The wisdom of the rule of evidence for which we are contending is strikingly illustrated in this very case. A foreign corporation may prosecute suits in our courts, and if the admission of a defendant at their suit, on a contract, was competent evidence of the legal existence of such corporation, or if its existence was to be inferred from the contract with it by its corporate name, unless rebutted, how could the defendant disprove the effect of such admission or inference ? What means has he within his control to prove that the plaintiffs have not been duly chartered by some foreign regal, or legislative power, even if the fact is so ? Difficult as it always must be to prove a negative, a case cannot be imagined in which such difficulty could be less easily encountered. The evidence, then, being incompetent to prove the plaintiffs a corporation, it ought to have been rejected by the court, and the plaintiffs nonsuited. There was nothing for the jury to pass upon, and I consider the special verdict irregular, and unauthorized, and presenting no foundation upon which the final judgment of this court can be pronounced. 8 Cowen, 682. The only question presented belonged exclusively to the judge at the circuit to determine, and should have been brought here upon a case or bill of exceptions. That an objection was
On the ground, then, of the error of the judge, and that the special verdict is wholly unauthorized and void, so much so that no final judgment can be rendered upon it, we grant a new trial, with costs to abide the event.