From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Blanton v. Miller

Superior Court of North Carolina
Sep 1, 1791
2 N.C. 4 (N.C. Super. 1791)

Opinion

(September Term, 1791.)

The grantor is sufficient to prove loss of a deed so as to admit secondary evidence.


The Court have never departed from this rule: where the party hath lost his deed, or is out of possession thereof, he himself, and no other person for him, must make oath of the loss, before he shall be permitted to read a copy, because no other can safely swear of his want of possession; and so the plaintiff was called, though it was (4) urged to the Court he was in a foreign country.

See Wright v. Bogan, post, 177; Park v. Cochran, post, 410; Nicholson v. Hilliard, 4 N.C. 24.

Cited: Harper v. Hancock, 28 N.C. 127.


Summaries of

Blanton v. Miller

Superior Court of North Carolina
Sep 1, 1791
2 N.C. 4 (N.C. Super. 1791)
Case details for

Blanton v. Miller

Case Details

Full title:BLANTON v. MILLER

Court:Superior Court of North Carolina

Date published: Sep 1, 1791

Citations

2 N.C. 4 (N.C. Super. 1791)

Citing Cases

Smallwood v. Mitchell

NOTE. — Upon the first point, see Murray v. Marsh, post, 290; Ingram v. Watkins, 1 N.C. Upon the last two…

McFarland v. Patterson

NOTE. — As to the proof of lost papers other than deeds, see Garland v. Goodloe, 3 N.C. 351; Cotten v.…