Court Opinion

ID: 6893465
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:47:03.742992+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:05:54.268536
License: Public Domain

By the Court,
Upton, C. J.:
The record in this cause contains several assignments of error, but the only point necessary to be considered relates *91to the rulings of the court in permitting the order of sale and the decree of confirmation, made in the County Court, to be used as evidence, and refusing to permit the residue of the same record to be introduced.
In case of a sale under a decree of the Circuit Court, the proof, preliminary to the introduction of the execution and sheriff’s deed, is the summons and proof of service, the pleadings and the judgment entry; or, in other words, the judgment-roll. The statute regulating probate proceedings does not contain a provision similar to that of § 269 of the Practice Act, directing the clerk to attach together the papers constituting the judgment-roll, unless, indeed, that section should be construed to include probate cases; but I cannot conceive that 'the omission materially alters the case.
If there was no such duty required of the clerk, in regard to cases in the Circuit Court, still those papers would contain proper preliminary evidence to warrant the introduction of the execution and sheriff’s deed, and no reason is perceived why similar papers, constituting the files and records of the Probate Court, should not be considered the foundation and proof of the administrator’s power to sell. If it be conceded that a decree reciting due service of process renders the production of the summons and proof of service unnecessary, yet it is not on that account to be assumed that such recital cannot be disputed by production of antecedent parts of the same record when such original papers contain intrinsic and convincing proof that the recitals are not true in fact. The petition, citation and proof of service are as essential parts of the record in a probate case as are the pleadings, process and return in proceedings in the Circuit Court.
These prior portions of the record may be regarded as the original evidence of the jurisdictional facts, and they are also material and pertinent for the purpose of showing what subject-matter was before the court for adjudication, and upon whom the adjudication is binding. If the decree purports to recite the same facts disclosed by these original papers, and there is a discrepancy between the recitals and *92those parts of the record upon which the recitals are based, it would be illogical to permit the latter to override or falsify the antecedent statement in the record, of which the recitals purport to be a summary. For these reasons the plaintiff had a right to insist that the record should be presented as a whole, or in other words, that a foundation should be laid for exhibiting the decretal order. (1 Greenl. Ev., § 511; Wilson et al. v. Cornell, 2 John. 280; Winans v. Durham, 5 Wend. 47.) At least, if it was proper to permit the defendant to lay such foundation by producing the recitals contained in the order of sale, the plaintiff could insist on the admission of such other parts of the same record as tended to explain the recitals.
Some doubt has existed whether the ruling ought to be treated as an error affecting a substantial right, inasmuch as the transcript in this case does not show what was contained in those parts of the record that were ruled out. In the absence of any knowledge of athe contents of the documents offered, this Court cannot say that the judgment of the Circuit Court would have been different had they been admitted in evidence; but evidently the character of the papers ruled out may be such that their admission ought to have changed the result; and as the transcript shows that they were offered for the purpose of proving a want of jurisdiction, and that the objection to their introduction was on the ground that the recital of service contained in the decree is not subject to be so disposed, it is thought that the court ought not to assume that the error in ruling them out did not affect a substantial right.
If on a trial a party propounds to a witness a pertinent and proper question, and through an erroneous ruling an answer is not received, in general, the record does not disclose wrhat the answer would have been; still it is not the practice in such cases to designate the error as one not affecting a substantial right.
I think also it ought not to be assumed, because of the presumption of regularity, that the residue of the record was inspected and found to contain nothing inconsistent with the jurisdictional facts recited in the decree. The *93avowed purpose of offering the evidence, and the nature of the objections to it, do not so indicate; and in addition to this, if they had been examined by the court and found to be in harmony with the recitals, it would have been in all respects proper to receive them in evidence as part and parcel of the very record on which the defendant based his title, and as throwing light on the only controverted question in the case.
It is the opinion of the Court that refusing to waive the evidence was an error affecting a substantial right, and the judgment must be reversed.
Mr. Justice McArthur dissented.