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Date

day, am, mass, time, deed, commission and rep

DATE. The designation or indication in an instrument of writing of the time and place when and where it was made.

In the Anglo-Saxon land charters dates were given by the year of the Indiction (q. v.). Dating by the year of our Lord was invented in 532. At a coun cil in 816 it was adopted for the acts of the synod and became general in documents from that data 2 Holdsw. Hist. E. L. 19. Some early charters were not dated ; some referred, to the regnal year, or a church festival," or a remarkable event ; 3 id. 196.

When the place is mentioned in the date of a deed, the law intends, unless the contrary appear, that it was executed at the place of the date ; Plow& 7 b. The word is derived from the Latin datum (given); because when the instruments were in Latin the form ran datum, etc. (given the — day of, etc.).

A date is necessary to the validity of a policy of insurance; but where there are separate underwriters, each sets down the date of his own signing, as this constitutes a separate contract ; Marsh. Ins. 336; 2 Pars. Marit. Law 27. Written instruments gener ally take effect from the day of their date, but the actual date of execution may shown, though different from that which the instrument bears; and it is said that the date is not. of the essence of a contract, but is essential to the identity of the writ ing by which it is to be proved; 2 Greenl. Ev. § 12, 489, n.; Cloyes v. Sweetser, 4 Cush. (Mass.) 403; Jackson v. McKenny, 3 Wend. (N. Y.) 233, 20 Am. Dec. 690; Gammon v. Freeman, 31 Me. 243; Bement v. Mfg. Co., 32 N. J. L. 513 ; McSparran v. Neeley, 91 Pa. 17; 17 E. L. & Eq. 548. See Knisely v. Sampson, 100 Ill. 573; 19 L. J. Q. B. 435. And if the written date is an impossible one, the time of delivery must be shown; Shepp. Touchst. 72; Cruise, Dig. c. 2, s. 61.

An indictment charging the commission. of a crime on an impossible date (in the year 18903) was held fatally defective; Terrell v. State, 165 Ind. 443, 75 N. E. 884, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 251, 112 Am. St. Rep. 244, 6 Ann. Cas. 851; see. also State v. Sexton, 10 N. C. 184, 14 Am. Dec. 584; State v. Litch, 33 Vt.

67; even when the mistaken date appears to have been merely a clerical error ; Robles v. State, 5 Tex. App. 347 ; and one charging the commission of an offense upon a date not yet arrived was held to allege no offense as having been already committed; Com. v. Doyle, 110 Mass. 103. Where the date al leged for the commission of a statutory of fense occurred before the statute was enact ed, and even before the state became a mem ber of the Union, it was held an impossible date; State v. O'Donnell, 81 Me. 271, 17 Atl. 66. See INDICTMENT ; Tam.

A date in a note or bill is required only for the purpose of fixing the time of pay ment, If the time of payment is otherwise indicated, no date is necessary; 1 Ames, Bills and Notes 145, citing Brewster v. Mc. Cardell, 8 (N. Y.) 478; Walker v. Geisse, 4 Whart. (Pa.) 252, 33 Am. Dec. 60. When a note payable at a fixed period after date has no date, a holder may fill the date with the day of issue; ibid.

It is usually presumed that a deed was de livered on the day of its date; but proof of the date of delivery must be given if the cir cumstances were such that collusion, might be practised; Steph. Dig. Ey. 138; Raines v. Walker, 77 Va. 92; Harman v. Oberdorfer, 33 Gratt. (Va.) 497; Saunders v. Blythe, 112 Mo. 1, 20 S. W. 319. See 6 Bing. 296; Ells worth v. R. Co., 34 N. J. L. 93; Cutts v. Mfg. Co., 18 Me. 190. But ,this presumption does not hold in respect to deeds in fee, unattest ed and unacknowledged ; Genter v. Morrison, 31 Barb. (N. y.) 155. Parol evidence is ad missible to show that the date stated in the in te8tilm,oniurc clause of a mortgage deed of personal property is not Its true date; Shaughnessey v. Lewis, 130 Mass. 355; Or cutt v. Moore, 134 Mass. 52, 45 Am. Rep. 278. There is a presumption as to a note that it was delivered on the day of its date; Cran son v. Goss, 107 Mass. 439, 9 Am. Rep. 45.

Where a date is given, both as a day of the week and a day of the month, and the two are inconsistent, the day of the month governs ; Minor v. Michie, Walker (Miss.) 27.