Court Opinion

ID: 6506435
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:18:34.295082+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:44.804201
License: Public Domain

R. W. WALKER, J.—
By the agreement of the counsel in this case, our investigation is confined to a single ■question—namely, whether there is legal proof sufficient to establish a re-conveyance of the land in controversy, by George W, Lore to Seth Lore, re-investing the latter with the title previously conveyed by him to the former.
Ordinarily, the mode of establishing such a re-conveyance would be the production of the deed, and proof of its execution. In this case, no deed was produced; and this devolved upon the complainant the necessity of proving the existence of such an instrument, of satisfactorily accounting for its absence, and of showing its contents. Inasmuch as the deed, if there was any, was made to Seth Lore, the law presumes that it passed into his possession, and remained in his custody. Seth Lore left this State in 1842, or 1843, as a fugitive from justice, and has not since been heard of. These facts, we think, constitute a sufficient excuse for the non-production of the deed.—1 Greenl. Ev. § 558 ; 4 Phill. Ev. (C. & H.’s ed.) .pp. 405-12-13; Cheatham v. Riddle, 8 Texas, 162.
The complainant, however, must not only account for the absence of the deed, but he must also clearly prove its ■existence as a genuine instrument.—Rhodes v. Seibert, 2 Barr, 18; Kelly v. Hammer, 18 Conn. 317; Young v. Mackall, 4 Md. 362; Mariner v. Sanders, 5 Gilman, 121,
If he succeeds in making this preliminary proof, then he will be permitted to show by parol the contents of the deed. But the evidence of such contents must be pointed and clear: no vague or uncertain recollection concerning its stipulations ought to supply the place of the written instrument itself; and Thompson, J., in Renner v. Bank of Columbia, 9 Wheat. 581, 700, goes so far as to say, that the proof must be so distinct “ as to leave no reasonable doubt as to the substantial parts of the paper.” Inasmuch as the statute of frauds requires that the conveyance of lands shall be by writing, and makes the writing, *654when it can be produced, the only legal evidence of the conveyance, common reason would seem to dictate that, in cases where the written instrument is lost or absent, the proof of its contents should be clear and satisfactory, and such as .to secure, as far as possible, the safety designed to be given by the written evidence.—United States v. Brittan, 2 Mason, 468 ; Tayloe v. Riggs, 1 Peters, 600; Metcalf v. Benthuysen, 3 Comst. 427; McBurney v. Cutler, 18 Barb. 203; In re Gangwere, 2 Harris, 426; Mariner v. Sanders, 5 Gilman, 121; Dennis v. Barber, 6 Serg. & R. 425; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 558, and notes.
In this case, neither the existence, nor the contents of the deed, is attempted to be proved otherwise than by the oral admissions of George W. Lore; and the same admissions are relied upon for the double purpose of establishing at once the execution and the contents of the deed. The counsellor the appellant, it is true, contend that these admissions are corroborated by some other circumstances, such as the relationship of the parties, their comparative pecuniary condition, and the evidence introduced for the purpose of showing a resumption by Seth Lore, about the time when the re-conveyance is supposed to have been made, of some of the lands in controversy; and in detennining the weight to which these declarations are entitled, we have given them the benefit of all the support which we think they ought to derive from these attendant circumstances.
The admissions are proved by David Lore, 'William S. Paullin, and George L. Barry, whose depositions were all taken in the mouth of June, 1853. The declarations of George "W. Lore, as detailed by these witnesses, were, in substance, “that he had given the property up, the times being hard, and he being unable to make his payments;” “that he had given all the lands back to Seth Lore;” “ that he had parted with all the rights he had to the land, and to Seth Lore;” “ that he had re-conveyed all the land back to his uncle.” It is proper to observe, that the witness who puts the admission in the form last quoted, states that he wras the purchaser of some of the lots at the sales made by the sheriff and master under exeeu*655tions against Seth Lore, and that he has sold all, or nearly all, of the lots so purchased by him; giving, in some instances, quit-claim, and in others warranty-deeds for the same. He is, therefore, interested in the question involved in, though notin the result of this suit. The admission testified to by Barry, was made, according to his statement, in 1841; while those detailed by David Lore and Paullin were made, either about the time of, or (as seems more probable from their evidence) before, George Lore’s removal to the country, which it is shown took place in the spring of 1846.
It is insisted that the proof of these admissions is not only sufficient to show that George W. Lore did in fact execute and deliver to Seth Lore a conveyance in writing, but that it serves the additional purpose of disclosing with requisite clearness and certainty the contents of that conveyance. Upon a careful review of the question, we are unwilling to assign to these declarations so extensive an effect.
It is said that admissions, made in casual conversations, are, in general, the weakest and most unreliable of all the grades of positive evidence; and, Mr. Greenleaf, speaking in reference to the proof of the contents of writings by the admissions of the parties, observes: “Very great weight ought not to be attached to evidence of what a party has been supposed to have said; as it frequently happens, not only that the witness has misunderstood what the party said, but that, by unintentionally altering a few of the expressions really used, he gives an effect to the statement completely at variance with what the party did actually say.”—1 Greenleaf’-s Ev. § 96; Threadgill v. White, 11 Iredell, 594. It is obvious, too, that the weight to which such evidence is entitled, diminishes in proportion to the length of .time which has elapsed since the occurrence of the 'conversations of which the witness speaks.
Moreover, in determining the effect we ought to give to George Lore’s admissions in this case, it is proper to consider, in connection with them, some other circumstances disclosed by the evidence. With some immaterial variety *656of expression, the admissions, as detailed by the different witnesses, are substantially the same; and it is a fair inference, that when George W. Lore said to Barry, in 1841, that “he had re-conveyed the land to Seth,” he was merely repeating the fact which he had previously communicated to David Lore and to Paullin, when he told them that “ he had given the property up ”—that he had “ given the land back to Seth,” &c. In other words, the presumption is, that if there was a written conveyance at all, it was in existence when the conversations took place, which are testified to by Paullin and David Lore. If this be not so, then the complainant’s whole case, both as to-the execution and the contents of the deed, rests upon the single admission proved by Barry. Geor'ge Lore was arrested upon a charge of murder, in the spring of 1841. The admissions proved by Paullin and David Lore were made a year o-r more before the arrest; and if they establish a re-conveyance at all, they jtrove one which must have been executed either before or about the time of George Lore’s removal to the country, which, as already stated, took place in the spi’ing of 1840. If this be the ease, then there is nothing in the suggestion made in the bill, that it was George Lore’s arrest which prevented him and Sheppard from joining in a single deed of re-conveyance. But, if we are to suppose that the re-conveyance from George was not executed until 1841, still it is shown hy the evidence that he was on hail in Eufaula, in 1841, for from four to six weeks; that Seth Lore was also in Eufaula during that time, and had frequent opportunities of transacting business with George; and that when George Lore went to the north on bail, Seth wras also there. No sufficient reason, therefore, is shown, why George and Sheppard did not join in a single instrument of re-conveyauce.
The original deed from Seth Lore to George and Sheppard was duly recorded. On the 25th October, 1841, Sheppard executed a re-conveyance to Seth; and this deed, it is shown, was recorded If a deed of re-conveyance was in fact executed by George Lore, why was it not also recorded? The original deed from Seth to *657George and Sheppard having been registered, there was a manifest propriety in having the re-conveyances put upon the record. There was ample opportunity to do so, whether we are to presume that the deed was executed before George’s removal to the country, or in 1841; because Seth Lore wrns in Eufaula as late as 1842, and, according to one witness, he was there in the fall of 1843. It is also shown, that Seth Lore was, by profession, a land-speculator—that his business was the buying and selling of lands. It is not unfair, therefore, to presume that he was little likely to neglect the precautions usually adopted by persons interested in the transfer of large quantities of real estate; and when we find, as in this case, that he did have recorded the re-conveyance from one of the two grantees, it is difficult to understand why, when he had ample opportunities so to do, he did not also place upon the record the re-conveyance from the other grantee.
At the time the witnesses testified, twelve or thirteen years had elapsed since the conversations took place of which they speak. These conversations appear to have been purely casual. The admissions detailed are certainly couched in vague and indefinite terms. The witness whoso evidence is mainly relied on, as proving a declaration by George Lore embodying a statement of the contents of the deed, is, as we have seen, interested in the question involved in this suit. If the admissions were more full and specific, and more clearly and positively identified than they are; still, the consideration of the frailty of human memory, and the uncertainty which, after such a lapse of time, generally attends this description of evidence, might well justify a court in refusing to give them very great weight.
If we were to concede, that the actual existence of a deed from George Lore is satisfactorily established by his admissions, we do not perceive how we could hold that its contents are shown with that clearness which, in such cases, the law wisely requires. The strongest proof for this purpose to be found in the record, is the admission of George Lore to Barry, that “lie had re-conveyed the land to Seth.” Can this admission, waiving all other objec*658tions to it, be deemed sufficient to establish both the factum and the contents of the deed? Stretching the words to their utmost capacity, they cannot mean more than that George Lore had executed a certain writing, and that it had the effect of re-conveying the lands to his uncle. So far as such a declaration tends to prove the execution of a deed, it is competent testimony; but the admission of the legal effect of a lost or absent writing is not proof of its contents. The difference is the familiar one between confessio juris and confessio facti, and is well illustrated by the case of Bloxam v. Elsee, 1 C. & P. 558, where the defendant proposed to prove the declaration of the bankrupt, that by certain deeds an interest in a patent-right had been conveyed by him to a stranger; the evidence was rejected, because it involved an opinion of the party upon the legal effect of the deeds.—1 Greenl. Ev. § 96 ; see Anderson v. Snow, 9 Ala. 247.
The complainant must prove, not only that George Loi’e executed a deed, but that such deed transferred the title to Seth Lore; and this transfer of title he must show by exhibiting to the court the contents of the conveyance, and not by the declaration of the grantor that such was its legal effect. The construction and operation of an instrument can be ascertained by the court only by an examination of its provisions, and uot by the judgment of either grantor or witnesses as to its effect.—Massure v. Noble, 11 Ill. 531; Dennis v. Barber, 6 S. & R. 425.
It is not necessary, however, either to press, or to decide this point. "We prefer to rest our judgment upon the ground, that the admissions of George "W". Lore, as proved by the witnesses, do not, under all the circumstances disclosed, satisfy our minds of the double proposition, that there was in fact a properly executed deed from George to Seth Lore, and that the contents of the same have been so clearly and fully exhibited to our view that we are able to declare that it operated a legal re-conveyance of the lands in controversy.
The decree of the chancellor is affirmed.