The facts are stated in the opinion delievered [delivered] in this Court. The defendant was warranted to recover the amount of a penalty alleged to have been incurred by him in illegally trading with a slave by the name of Ganze, the property of the plaintiff. In order to prove the charge, the declarations of the defendant were relied on. The defendant admitted that his agent at his landing had received such articles from Ganze as were claimed by the plaintiff, and that he had received them, but did not know there was no permission in writing; that they had been entered on his barter book, but were not paid for, as the plaintiff could see by inspecting the book, which he tendered to him for that purpose, as also the time when they were received. In order to show when the transaction took place, the witness who proved these declarations was asked, "What was the time or trading, as appearing on the book?" The question was objected to because of the want of notice to produce the book. The objection was overruled and the testimony received, and upon it it appeared the warrant was brought within due *Page 344 time. No more of the case is here stated than is necessary to exhibit the point upon which our opinion is founded.
Section 75, ch. 34, Revised Statutes, forbids the trading with slaves for the articles therein enumerated without a written permission from the owner or manager of the slave, specifying the articles which he is permitted to sell, under a penalty of $100 for each offense. By section 77 the offense is made indictable, and by section 80 it is "Provided, that no suit or indictment shall be prosecuted for any violation of section 75 unless such suit or indictment be commenced within twelve months after such violation." The defendant had pleaded that the suit had not been commenced within the time limited by the act, and it was (482) important to the plaintiff to show that it was brought within due time. The evidence offered to prove the fact was not competent, and his Honor erred in receiving it. Everything said by the defendant at any time concerning the transaction was legal evidence against him, and the plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of it. But the objection now is that the evidence was not to prove any declaration of his whatever, but of a separate and distinct fact — the contents of the barterbook. The witness was not asked what the defendant had said was the time of committing the offense, but what the barter book stated was the time. In all the cases to which our attention has been drawn the testimony was as to the declarations and acts of the defendants accompanying them. In King v. Moores the indictment was for administering seditiousoaths. Witnesses swore to some words, in nature of an oath, spoken by the prisoner, who held a paper in his hands whilst he uttered them, and it was insisted no parol evidence could be received of what hesaid, because notice had not been given to produce the paper from which it was supposed he had read them. The objection was overruled by the court. Hunt's case, in 5 Eng. C. L., 377, is to the same effect. The defendant, with others, was indicted for a conspiracy to disturb the peace. A meeting was held at Smithfield, where Hunt appeared on the hustings, and delivered to the witness a paper containing, as he stated, a copy of the resolutions to be proposed to the meeting, and the witness swore that the resolutions he heard read corresponded with the copy so delivered to him. It was objected the paper was but a copy of the resolutions, and, therefore, not the best evidence without notice to produce the original. Justice Bailey, before whom the case was tried, admitted the evidence, and, upon taking the opinion of the other judges, his decision was approved, upon the ground that the paper produced was received from the hands of Hunt as containing the resolutions (483) then under discussion in the meeting, and, as to him, it was as good if not better evidence than any other could have been. InMoore's case it was not necessary to produce the paper he held in his *Page 345 hand, because he administered the oath in the hearing of the witness. It was, therefore, that his declaration, or what he said, was given in evidence against him, and if the paper held by him had been produced and had proved to be a blank, still what he did and said in administering the oath would have been evidence against him; and in Hunt's case, it was the same as if he had repeated to the witness the resolutions, or the witness had heard him propose them to the meeting, for he told him it contained the resolutions to be proposed, or then actually under discussion. In truth, asChief Justice Abbott remarked, the paper handed the witness was as good if not better evidence than any other. In both cases it was what the defendants said that was given in evidence. The principle of those cases does not apply to the one we are considering.
The defendant Daniels said the articles had not been paid for, and tendered the barter book as proving that fact. He did not say when the trading took place, but that the book would show it; nor was the witness called on to prove any declarations of his as to that fact. He was asked, not what the book had said as to the time, but what the book stated. It was in no part a view of the res gestae. The case of La Motte, 1 E. C. L., 126, was decided upon a different principle than those we have been considering, but still upon one which does not help the plaintiff's case. He was indicted for carrying on a traitorous correspondence with France while war existed between her and England. Letters of the prisoner, written to the French Government, were intercepted, copied, and sent on to their destination. The reception of these copies in evidence was opposed, upon the ground that the originals ought to be produced, as being the best evidence. The objection was overruled. The originals were not in the possession or under the control of the prisoner, and the doctrine of notice did not apply, neither (484) were they within the jurisdiction of the court. No process that could issue could produce them. The copies, then, were the best evidence the nature of the case admitted. Here the barter book was in the possession of the defendant. The plaintiff might have compelled its production, or, by giving due notice, entitled himself to give parol evidence of its contents. He has not, therefore, given the best evidence the nature of his case admitted. For this error on the part of the presiding judge the judgment must be reversed.
PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.
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