Burke v. Wolfe

6 Jones & S. 263
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 9, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Jones & S. 263 (Burke v. Wolfe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burke v. Wolfe, 6 Jones & S. 263 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

By the Court.—Freedman, J.

Upon the trial, the defense of a satisfaction and discharge of the indebtedness sued upon, by Udolpho Wolfe, in his lifetime, was wholly abandoned; for the defendant gave no evidence tending to establish it.

As to the further defense of a satisfaction and discharge of such indebtedness by the plaintiffs, in consideration of the stay of, and the rendition of services by the defendant, in the business to be continued by them, as executors, pursuant to the directions of the testator, there was a clear conflict of testimony, and the question depended entirely upon the relative credibility of the parties. An examination of the whole evidence fails to disclose a tangible ground on which the determination of this branch of the case, which the referee has made, can be disturbed.

The referee allowed to the defendant the sum of sixty dollars, paid by Udolpho Wolfe to Mrs. Lizzie Garland, and erroneously deducted from the amount of commissions earned by the defendant, as claimed in the answer, and also the sum of fifty dollars, received by Nettie Wolfe, as to which the defendant had raised no dispute whatever.

The sum of four hundred and forty-one dollars, being the aggregate amount of sundry bills which the defendant owed to third parties, and which Udolpho Wolfe paid to them for defendant’s account, constituted, under the evidence, which the referee must be deemed to have credited, a proper charge against the defendant.

The claim advanced by the defendant, that Udolpho [267]*267Wolfe had promised and agreed to contribute, and, in fact, had contributed toward the support of defendant’s mother, was not disputed ; but the evidence was conflicting as to the extent to which Udolpho Wolfe had thus obligated himself. The referee, in allowing to the defendant only six hundred and seventeen dollars on this account, adopted the version of the plaintiffs, in regard to the extent of such obligation ; and, as in the same, they were indirectly corroborated by the fact that the commissions of the defendant were increased on or shortly before January 1, 1866, the finding of the referee, upon this point, is fully sustained by evidence.

The most important question which remains to be noticed, relates to the admissibility of certain books received by the referee in evidence against defendant’s objection and exception. They consisted of the passbooks of the defendant, and of the books relating to the business of the deceased. From the whole case, it is evident that their contents must have exercised a material, if not a controlling influence over the mind of the referee; and unless their admission can be justified, on the ground that they constituted evidence per se of the claim of the plaintiffs, a new trial must be ordered.

As to the pass-books, it appeared that, for the most time, they were in the possession of the defendant; that they contained debit and credit entries, and purported to be a full account between the defendant and Udolpho Wolfe; that, as often as the defendant saw fit, he handed them to the book-keeper of Udolpho Wolfe to write them up; that thereupon the said book-keeper did write them up, by making all necessary entries therein, and did return them to the defendant; and that all the entries therein were made by such bookkeeper, in his capacity as such. These books, therefore, constituted accounts that had been rendered to the defendant, .and as such they were clearly admissible, irrespective of the question whether the entries [268]*268therein were original entries, or entries transcribed from other books.

The books relating to the business of Udolpho Wolfe, deceased, consisted of a day-book, journal, ledger, cash-book, and blotter. Prior to their admission, William H. Harrison, a witness called on behalf of the plaintiffs, testified, that he had been the bookkeeper of Udolpho Wolfe, in his lifetime, and as such, had the entire charge of the said books; that all the entries made therein were made by himself, in the discharge of his duties as such book-keeper, and in the ordinary course of the business of said Udolpho Wolfe ; and that they were correctly made. He also showed that the cash-book contained, with a few exceptions, the entries of all the amounts with which the defendant had been charged in his pass-books, and in plaintiffs’ bill of particulars, furnished in this action; and that the remaining debits were to be found in some of the other books. The witness further testified, that all these charges were in his handwriting; that they were-made by him, in the ordinary course of his employment ; that they were the original entries; and that they were correct. And finally, the witness testified, that most of the moneys thus charged were paid by him to the defendant, over the counter, either in bills or checks, as directed by Udolpho Wolfe, or his partner, David H. Burke. This testimony was clearly sufficient to admit the said books.

The rule laid down in Vosburgh v. Thayer (12 Johns. 461), and followed in many subsequent cases, upon which the learned counsel for the appellant so confidently relies, to the effect that the books of a party ought not to be admitted, unless a foundation is first laid for their admission, by proof that the party had no clerk; that some of the articles charged have been delivered; that the books produced are the account-books of the party ; and that he keeps fair and honest [269]*269accounts; and, this by those who have dealt and settled with him, was undoubtedly at one time the settled law of this State. But it applied only to cases in which the plaintiff, though incompetent to testify generally in his own behalf, sought to introduce entries in his own handwriting as evidence in his favor.

In Conklin v. Stamler (2 Hilt. 423), Daly, P. J., showed how this rule originated. He showed that the practice of allowing the party’s books of account to be received as sufficient evidence of the existence of the debt, came into use in this State with the early Dutch colonists, in whose courts merchants and traders were always allowed to exhibit their books of account, where it was acknowledged or proven that there had been a dealing between the parties, provided the books had been regularly kept. The parties appeared before the court, and made their own statements, and, if they differed as to a fact which the court thought material, either party might be put to his oath, and the party who made the entries could be interrogated in respect to the truth or correctness of each item. After the establishment of a State government, the practice of allowing the entries of the parties, made in the usual course of business, to be received as evidence, was recognized as a usage established by the courts of the State. But as it was the rule of the common law of England, that the party to the record could not be a witness, his supplementary oath was rejected ; and, as Lord Holt had said, that a tradesman’s shop-book was not of itself evidence, without something more, the courts undertook to supply what that “something more” should be. They therefore devised and required, as a condition precedent, the preliminary proofs insisted upon in Vosburgh v. Thayer (supra); and this rule remained in force until the passage of thact enabling a party to testify the same as any other witness. This important change obviated the difficulty [270]

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Bluebook (online)
6 Jones & S. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-wolfe-nysuperctnyc-1874.