On the trial of this cause in the district court the defendant below objected to the reading in evidence to the jury the receipt sued on, because the same was not stamped as required by the revenue laws of the United States, and thereupon the plaintiff asked and obtained leave of the court for that purpose, and then in open court attached to said receipt the United States revenue stamp required by law and again offered to read the receipt in evidence to the jury, and defendants again objected, because the receipt had not been stamped in the manner required by law. Defendant’s objections were overruled by the court, and the receipt read to the jury, to which defendant excepted, and now assign's the ruling of the court as error. The act of Congress passed June, 1864, section 344, reads as follows: “ISTo deed,, instrument, document, writing or paper required by law.to be stamped, which has been signed or issued without being duly stamped, or with a deficient stamp, nor any copy thereof, shall be' recorded or admitted as evidence in any court, until a legal stamp or stamps shall have been affixed thereto.” And the same statute affixes a heavy penalty to the signing or issuing or using any such paper without a sufficient stamp, with intent to evade the revenue laws. This statute has been the subject of judicial decision in most of the States of the Union, and these decisions have been remarkable for their uniformity in the conclusion that the prohibition to receiving such paper or writing in evidence had especial reference to the courts of the United States, and not to the State courts (Carpenter v. Snelling, and Linch v. Morse, 97 Mass. R., 452; Beebe v. Hutton, 47 Barb., 187); and that though the State courts might hold that law binding upon them, yet they will not declare a written instrument .void, and reject it as evidence, without a stamp, unless such instrument is being used unstamped *817with an intent to defraud the government. (Harper v. Clark. 17 Ohio R., 190; 24 Iowa, 355.)
And though a party maybe indicted and punished in the United States Courts, for using or attempting to use an unstamped instrument, with intent to evade the United States revenue laws, yet it has been decided in most of the Northern States that an instrument in writing without a stamp is not absolutely void, especially when the omission to stamp can be shown to be the result of innocent accident or inability to procure the necessary stamp. In such cases it has been the rule to allow the party, who wishes to use the written instrument in evidence, to attach the stamp to the instrument in open court, and then cancel it in the presence of the court. (17 Ohio R., 190; Ford v. Clinton, 25 Iowa, 157; 47 Barb., 194; 97 Mass. R., 458; Hallock v. Jaudin, 34 Cal. 167; Toby v. Chapman, 13 Allen, 123.) The receipt in question was executed in 1863, when it was impossible for the maker to procure the necessary stamps. But on the trial 'he brought his receipt into court and stamped it by leave of the court, and after the receipt had been properly stamped, and the stamp cancelled by order of the court, it was properly admitted in evidence to the jury.
There is, however, a fatal defect in the receipt that cannot be cured by presumption. The receipt reads as follows :
uReceived, Helena, 15 August, 1863, of James Coker two boxes of tobacco, one weighing, mark, 113, one do., 63, which we promise to account for the same.
“ D. W. DAILY, “D. HODGES.”
This receipt was wholly insufficient to establish what quantity, or indeed that any tobacco was delivered. It is true it says two boxes of tobacco, but that is too indefinite to establish anything before a jury, and the remainder of the receipt does not make it more definite. The weighing mark, 113 and 63, might have re*818ferred to the description of the box, or the gross weight of box and tobacco, but certainly could not, without an explanation, refer to the weight of the tobacco. And this receipt was all the evidence before the jury in regard to the quantity of the tobacco, and this could not support a verdict or judgment. It is suggested by counsel that the defendant’s amended answer admitted the receipt of one hundred and fifty pounds; but it should he recollected that the amended answer was stricken out on motion of plaintiff, and was not read to the jury at all, and could not he the foundation for a verdict. The defendant in his assignment of errors makes no complaint of the ruling of the court in striking out his amended answer, but it is believed that there may have been and probably was ‘error in the ruling of the court in that particular. If the tobacco was deposited by the plaintiff with the defendants, or defendant, for sale on commission or otherwise, with the specific instruction to sell for fl Confederate money,” and the defendant, in compliance with those instructions, did sell for Confederate money, and further, if the plaintiff agreed to receive Confederate money, for the tobacco, when sold, then he should be bound by his contract, and under proper pleadings should be held responsible for all the consequences. Again, if plaintiff deposited the tobacco with defendant for sale on commission, then the judgment for interest is excessive. But these facts must he determined by the evidence. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded. .