Ayres v. Van Lieu

5 N.J.L. 765
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1820
StatusPublished

This text of 5 N.J.L. 765 (Ayres v. Van Lieu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayres v. Van Lieu, 5 N.J.L. 765 (N.J. 1820).

Opinion

Kirkpatrick C. J.

This is a writ of error from the Middlesex Pleas, upon upon two bills of exception, taken at the trial of this cause,

The plaintiffs kept a lumber-yard in the city of NewBruns*wic/c. The defendant was building a house there, and had employed one David Hagar, as his carpenter. In order that the lumber, for the building, might be skilfully selected, and the proper quantities purchased, Hagar was sent, from time to time, to the lumber yard, to make such selection and purchase; and the parcels purchased were charged, in the plaintiffs’ books of account, against the defendant, as taken away, per David Hagar.

After the plaintiffs, at the trial, had proved and exhibited their books of account, containing these charges, they called the said David Hagar, as a witness, to prove the facts above stated; and to fortify the charges in their books. To the admission of this witness, for this purpose, it was objected, by the defendant, and the objection was sustained by the court, and the testimony rejected.

This is the subject of the first bill of exception; and I am wholly at a loss to discover, upon what ground the court placed their opinion.

- The plaintiffs’ books of account, if they were evidence at all, were evidence of the sale and delivery of the articles to the defendant, and the note shewing that they were taken away per David Hagar, is a particularity which rather adds to, than detracts from, their credit; it is a particularity, too, pretty common among dealers, especially in the small way, in order to give the greater satisfaction to their customers. Now, that this David Hagar, who was sent for the lumber, to whom it was delivered, who carried it away, and worked it up in the defendant’s building, should not be admitted as a witness, would be a strange doctrine. He had no interest. A judgment, on whichsoever side it might be, upon the state of facts now developed, could never be given in evi[883]*883donee against him, or, in any way, subject him to an action upon this entry. The book does not import, nor is there any evidence, that the credit was at all given to llagar, or to the defendant upon llagada word or representation, or any thing that he had said ; it is, therefore, to be taken, that it was given upon the personal application of the defendant himself, and upon the plaintiffs' own knowledge of his circumstances, llagar, therefore, being in no way interested, was a lawful witness; and certainly the subject matter to be proved was lawful. For though the books, themselves, might have been considered as sufficient evidence of the sale and delivery of the articles, to the defendant, yet a *party may always give other evidence to corroborate his books, and to strengthen his charges against any individual. Upon this objection, therefore, presented on this stage of the trial, I think the court were mistaken in the law.

Again. It appeared, from the plaintiff’s entries, that the first parcel of the lumber was delivered on the 19th of July, 1814, and the last on the 15th of November, in the same year; and upon the production of their leger, to which this account had been transferred, there appeared, on the credit side of the account, this entry, viz. 1814. Deer. 5, By David llagada note, which, when paid, will be for this account in full, $242 36 It appeared, further, that this note had been put into the bank for collection, by the plaintiff, and again withdrawn at the request of David Hangar, and that the said David Uagar wus in credit and doing business till some time in January or February, 1816, when he made an assignment of his property, and went to gaol.

The plaintiff then offered to prove, by the said David, llagar, that at the time of the making of the said note, and ever since, he was and has been, unable to pay his debts; that the plaintiffs called upon him for payment, when the note became due, but that he could not, and did not pay it. To this testimony the defendant objected, because the said David llagar, was interested in the event of the suit, and the court sustained the objection and rejected the witness. And in this, upon the case now before them, it appears to me, they judged rightly.

[884]*884David Hagar had given his note for this money. His assignment of his property and his going to gaol, even if he had taken the benefit of the insolvent laws, does not discharge him from the debt; but if by his testimony, he can procure a verdict to be rendered against the de? fondant, and fix it upon him, he is then exonerated, fop the plaintiff cannot recover twice for the same thing; it would be an immediate discharge from a dipect and positive liability, and that has always been considered as a direct interest. Upon the matter contained in the second bill of exception, therefore, there is no error.

But even if it were otherwise, and the court had erred in this last, too, as I think they did in the first objection? it would be no ground to reverse the judgment. It is not enough, for this purpose, that the court should have erred, they must have erred in *a material point; the testimony rejected, must be such as might lawfully have produced a different verdict. Now that is not the case here; for admitting every thing which the plaintiffs offered to prove by this witness, still they are not entitled to recover,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 N.J.L. 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayres-v-van-lieu-nj-1820.