Court Opinion

ID: 3644598
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:01:10.730523+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:49:33.711043
License: Public Domain

The record which was introduced in evidence to sustain the plea of the pendency of another action does not effect that object. In that action there are a number of plaintiffs, of which (528) the plaintiff J. M. Propst is one. That controversy is concerning a tract of land, of which the land in dispute here is only a part. The rule is that the same plaintiff shall not sue the same defendant twice for the same thing, and when the parties are the same and the thing sued for is the same, the right shown in both actions must be identical. Casey v.Harrison, 17 N.C. 244. The pendency of that action did not render the bringing of this one unnecessary and vexations. The parties are not the same, and the purposes of the actions also differ. In that suit the object which those plaintiffs principally sought to accomplish was the establishing of the will of Adam Overwenters, the record of which had been destroyed, as they alleged. They did not seek to recover possession of the tract of land. In this action one of those plaintiffs demands the possession of twenty-four acres, which he alleges that the defendant wrongfully withholds from him, and damages for its detention.
We think that the evidence which the plaintiff was allowed to introduce in order to establish the fact that Adam Overwenters' will was probated, and also its contents, should have been excluded. It seems to us to have been mere hearsay. He was allowed to tell what the clerk told him. The fact that the one whose unsworn statement was thus allowed to go to the jury as evidence was the keeper of the record, the contents of which it is proposed to establish, does not afford a sufficient reason for the violation in this instance of the well-settled rules governing the admission of testimony. No witness, so far as this record shows, was produced who could say upon oath and subject to cross-examination, that the will of Adam Overwenters was ever recorded in Burke County. Indeed, so far as appears, no witness was called who testified that any such will ever existed. We do not think that the plaintiff should *Page 362 
(529) have been permitted to prove the existence of this will, its probate, and its contents, by the mere statements of the clerk. To allow this would be to give to his oral communications the effect which is given by law to his solemn certificate, for the use of which as evidence the statute provides. Nelson v. Whitfield, 82 N.C. 46, seems to sustain the ruling of his Honor. In that case, however, the fact that the will which was there in controversy had been probated was proved by the testimony of one who had himself read it on the records. Its contents were proved by the oath of other witnesses, who could only testify that they had heard others read what was said to be the will or a copy of it. The learnedJustice who delivered the opinion of the Court in that case says that "the evidence offered on the part of the defendants relating to the contents of the paper purporting to be the will was slight, and taken by itself might not have been sufficient to satisfy the jury of the contents, but it was some evidence, and when taken in connection with the facts proved, the long possession of the defendants and their ancestors in conformity with the alleged provisions of the will, and the long acquiescence of the plaintiffs in the exclusive possession of the land by the defendants it makes a very strong case for them." While it may have been allowable in that particular case, in connection with the facts proved, to permit evidence of what a person read as the will, we do not think in this case any sufficient reason exists for allowing the plaintiff to tell what the clerk told him. We are not able to see how the fact that he whose words are to be repeated was the keeper of the records that he professed to be reading can alter the wholesome truth that forbids the admission of such evidence because it is mere hearsay — a statement made neither under oath nor subject to cross-examination. There is, as it seems to us, no greater presumption that the clerk would read correctly than that he would speak truthfully about the contents of the will. The same (530) sound reason that would require us to exclude what he said if it was offered, compels us to exclude what he read.
New trial.
Cited: Jones v. Flynt, 159 N.C. 98. *Page 363