
    Clark vs. Nixon.
    In declaring upon a covenant contained in a recorded conveyance of lands, the plaintiff may make profert of a certified transcript, and need not show forth the, original.
    Though profert be made of the original, the plaintiff may nevertheless resort to a certified transcript as primary evidence at the trial. Per Nelson, Ch. J.
    Demurrer to declaration. The action was for a breach of a covenant of quiet enjoyment contained in a deed of lands executed by the defendant to the plaintiff’s grantor. Profert of the deed was made as follows: “ A duly certified transcript of which said indenture from the record in the clerk’s office of Herkimer county, where the original has been duly recorded according to law, the said plaintiff now brings here into court,” &c. The defendant demurred, assigning for cause that profert was not made of the original indenture, nor its loss or destruction averred. Joinder.
    
      J. O’Connell, for the defendant
    
      W. Scidmore, for the plaintiff.
   By the Court, Nelson, Ch, J.

The revised statutes provide that the record of a conveyance duly recorded, or a transcript thereof duly certified, may be read in evidence with the like force and effect as the original conveyance. (1 R. S., 759, § 17.) The record or transcript is thus made primary evidence of the contents of the deed, and I can therefore perceive no reason why profert may not be made of the transcript, as well as of the original. Indeed, if the averment were in -the usual form, proof of the instrument by the production of a transcript duly certified under the statute, would be sufficient at the trial. The counsel for the plaintiff supposes that he might, in case of such an averment, have been obliged to produce the original; but under the statute the transcript is presented as the original for all the purposes of evidence hi a court of justice.

Our act, in legal force and effect, is somewhat like the statutes of 10 Anne and 3 and 4 Ed. 6, explained by 13 Eliz., the former of which allows proferí of a copy of the enrolment of a deed of bargain and sale, and the latter of an exemplification of the enrolment of letters patent. (1 Phillips' Ev. 463.) And the reason for this is, the party may not have possession of the original ; for it frequently happens that several parcels of land are comprised in the same conveyance, and the title afterwards derived to different persons. Each owner of a parcel cannot, therefore, have the possession or control of the original conveyance.

I put the decision, however, upon the ground that the statute makes the transcript primary evidence of the deed—an original for all the purposes of pleading and proof—and allows it to be used in any stage of the cause, the same as the original.

There must be judgment for the plaintiff, with leave to amend on the usual terms.

Ordered accordingly.  