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Cornett v. Williams U.S. 226 (1874)

handle is hein.slavery/ussccases0477 and id is 1 raw text is: Syllabus.
to amend their pleadings, and if need be to take further
proofs. Error was also committed by the Circuit Court in
affirming the decree of the District Court, as it is plain it
should have been reversed. For these reasons the decree
of the Circuit Court is in all thiings REVERSED, and the cause
remanded for further proceedings
IN CONFORMITY TO THIS OPINION.
CORNETT V. WILLIAMS.
1. Under the act of July 2d, 1864, providing that in civil actions in courts
of the United States there shall- be no exclusion of any witness, 1 be-
cause he is a party to or interested in the issue tried ; witnesses may,
other things allowing, testify (without any order of court) by deposi-
tion. And if not satisfied with a deposition which they have given,
have a right, without order of court, to give a second one.
2. What evidence so far tended to prove, on the part of a person who, dur-
ing the late rebellion, removed his slaves from loyal parts of the country
to parts in rebellion, a purpose to sell them in these last, and justified
a charge on an assumption of possibility, that the jury might find the
purpose to have existed. This matter passed upon.
3. Whei, under the what is known in Texas as its 1 Sequestration Act, a
person has brought suit to recover land, and the marshal, in pursuance
of the writ of sequestration, takes possession of the land, it is in the cus-
tody of the law. But when replevied (as the said act allows it to be), it
passes from the possession of the law into the possession of the party re-
plevying.
4. The rule established by this court as to the introduction of secondary
evidence-that it must'be the best which the party has it in his power
to produce-is to be so applied as to promote the ends of justice and
guard against frauds, surprise, and imposition. The courthas not gone
to the length of the English adjudications, that there are no degrees in
second.ary evidence. Hence, where the records of a court were all burnt
'during the rebellion, whatappeared to be a copy of an officially certified
copy was held properly received; the certified copy, if any existed, not
being in the party's custody or plain control, and there being no positive
evidence that it existed, though there was evidence tending to showi that
it did. There is nothing in the act of Congress of M1arch 3d, 1871 (16
Stat. at Large, 474), providing for putting in a permanent form proof
of the contents of judicial records, nor in the statute of .Texas of 11th

226

CORNETT V. WILLIAMS.

[Sup. Ct.

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