Alcolm Co. v. Brenack
This text of 98 N.Y.S. 199 (Alcolm Co. v. Brenack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Closer examination of the record discloses an infirmity not noted in the opinion heretofore handed down, and we conclude that a new trial should be had. The cause of action arose out of dealings by the plaintiff with the defendants’ husband, her assumed agent, and the issue was whether he had authority. The justice, however, excluded every inquiry into the facts from which an actual agency could be inferred, sustaining objections to a line of obviously proper questions to the husband, when called as a witness, to show the nature of his connection with the business, and rendered judgment for the defendant upon the theory that the issue was concluded by the witness’ statement that he had no authority.
That this statement was elicited by the plaintiff’s counsel, gave it no conclusive effect as against other evidence to the contrary. A party is concluded by adverse testimony of his own witness only where the matter brought out is collateral to the issue. Here the testimony went to the vital issue in the case, and the plaintiff was entitled to prove the facts by any competent evidence at its command. The error in the ex-[200]*200elusion of testimony to facts from which an agency could be inferred was not, therefore,- cured by the statement of the witness to the effect that he had no authority, and the affirmance of the judgment is properly questioned upon this motion.
Judgment reversed, and new trial granted,-with costs to abide the event.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
98 N.Y.S. 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alcolm-co-v-brenack-nyappterm-1906.