It is certainly the general rule, that where a deed is offered in evidence, to which there is no subscribing witness, proof of the hand-writing of the obligor will authorise the jury to infer its due execution. This rule must, however, in its application, be confined to those cases where the deed is offered in evidence against the maker. In this case, the deed offered in evidence, purported to convey an interest in the land from one of the plaintiffs to the other, and was the evidence of their right to maintain the action in their joint names, to which deed the defendant was neither party nor privy. This was in effect an attempt to prove a fact by the declaration of the party in whose favor it was offered. The declarations or admissions of a party, are evidence against himself, but cannot be evidence against another, who was not privy to them.
Cases doubtless exist in which the declarations of a person against his interest have been held evidence against another. Thus in the case of Bliss v. Winston, [1 Ala. Rep. N. S. 344,] it was held, that the declaration of a tenant in possession could be given in evidence after his death, to show under whom he held the possession; but the allowance of such testimony depends on principles altogether different from those which must govern this case. The objection to the testimony in this case is, that it was not shown when the deed was made, and to hold that .the proof of the signature established the date of the deed, would be to permit the party to make testimony for himself. To make it competent evidence against the defendant, it should have been shown that it was made when it bore date, or at least, that it existed at the time of the commission of the alleged trespass.
The case cited from Littell, merely shows that the probate and registration of a deed establishes the date of its execution. This is a decision upon the statute of Kentucky, authorising the registration of deeds, and can have no application to the question here *419presented. In the case of Bradford and Dawson v. Campbell [2 Ala. 203,] we held that the registration of a deed under the act of 1828, did not dispense with proof of its execution when offer-' ed in evidence.
There is no error in the judgment, and it is therefore affirmed.