De Verry v. Schuyler

8 N.Y.S. 221, 5 Silv. Sup. 72, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 233, 54 Hun 639, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2247
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 N.Y.S. 221 (De Verry v. Schuyler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Verry v. Schuyler, 8 N.Y.S. 221, 5 Silv. Sup. 72, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 233, 54 Hun 639, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2247 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Fish, J.

• On the trial of this action, the defendant, as executor, was called as a witness in his own behalf, and was examined as to the handwriting of the notes in question, and of the signatures thereto. Upon this the plaintiff was called, sworn, and examined, as a witness in his own behalf, as to the transactions between himself and the testatrix, deceased. The evidence was objected to by counsel for the defendant as inadmissible under the provisions of section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The objection was well taken; and the admission of the evidence was error, for which the judgment must be reversed. The respondent claims that the examination of the executor as a witness in relation to the handwriting opened the door to the testimony of respondent in his own behalf, within the exception contained in said section. The exception, properly read, is as follows: “Except where the executor is examined in his own behalf concerning the samé transaction or communication.” The plain meaning of the exception was to give the opposite party a •chance to be heard, in answer to the testimony of the executor, upon the ■point as to which the executor gave evidence. The spirit and intent of the section is to protect a dead man’s estate against claims, based upon the testimony of an interested person, which the deceased, if living, might controvert, and to suspend the operation of the rule only as to such transactions concerning which the executor himself is examined. To illustrate: Suppose the executor had given evidence in this case to the effect that he saw the notes in question made and delivered to the plaintiff by a person other than the testatrix; or that the executor drew the notes and delivered them himself, in the life-time of the testatrix. In the case stated, the plaintiff could be sworn as to the facts stated by the executor, and to controvert them; but it could not be claimed that such testimony of the executor brought the case within the "exception, so as to allow plaintiff to be examined in his own behalf concerning alleged transactions between himself and the testatrix, and to show that she delivered the notes to him. It would be a clear perversion of the letter and spirit of the statute. This view is in harmony with divers judicial authorities. See Ward v. Plato, 23 Hun, 402; Chadwick v. Fonner, 69 N. Y. 407; Pinney v. Orth, 88 N. Y. 447; Clift v. Moses, 112 N. Y. 426, 20 N. E. Rep. 392.

But, upon the merits, this recovery ought not to stand, except as to the ■one note of $500 made April 22, 1885. The weight of evidence is 'clearly against the plaintiff. His recovery rests upon very slight foundations, hardly sufficient, if uncontroverted, to justify such an inroad upon the estate, where the mouth of the alleged maker of the notes is closed. The chief witnesses sworn in support of the claim were in close intimacy with the plaintiff, evidently interested in securing favorable results; and the case is surrounded by •circumstances of doubt and suspicion. It has the usual ear-marks of a manufactured claim, and is not well supported. The evidence offered by defendant tending to discredit the genuineness of the notes in question is stronger, and entitled to more weight, than that given by plaintiff in support of their validity. This is so, even if the plaintiff’s testimony in relation to transactions with the testatrix is allowed to stand. Suppose it shall be held that the plaintiff was properly examined in his own behalf, and that his testimony ■should have been received for what it was worth. The question then arises as to how much reliance ought to be placed upon it. On his direct examination he had testified very positively that the deceased in person, and for sufficient consideration, gave him every one of the notes. Then followed his cross-examination, when, among a good many other questions and answers, he gave the following: “Question. Did you ever hand the notes to Mrs. Flack-[223]*223hart? Answer. No; I don’t think I ever took them out of their hiding-place. I kept them hid away. ” And in relation to the consideration of the $1,000 note: “Question. Where did you get the money? Answer. I did not steal it. Q. Where did you get it? A. I worked for it, and earned it.” And in relation to the $5,000 note: “Question. Did you let her have $5,000 when she gave you the note? Answer. I did. Q. Did you let her have five thousand dollars at that time? A. Yes, sir. Q. Where did you hand it to her? A. . With my hand. Q. Where were you at the time? A. In the house. Q. If what house? A. In my own house. Q. Where did you get the money? A. It is a hard question to answer. I went to the bank, and drew it out. Q. Do you remember going to the bank, and drawing out $5,000, and letting her have it? A. Yes, sir.” Then follows the further cross-examination of thr witness, a little further on, in relation to the same note: “Question. Did you ever give her any money for that note? Answer. What note? (Note shown witness.) I can’t recollect. I used to go to the bank often, and sometimes she would want one hundred dollars,more or less. She opened a gentlemen’s boarding-house in New York, and at that time—it must have been at that time—I loaned her the money.” Then, again, in relation to the same note; “Question. You can’t tell anything about the amount without looking at the note? Answer. Well, no; because I don’t recollect. How can I recollect? q. Have you any recollection of ever letting her have at one time $5,000 in ■cash? A. No, sir; I do not. I never kept a memorandum book; but, as far as my memory goes, I could not answer that. I could not tell what time 1 :gave money for any of them. Q. You know whether you recollect it or not? A. I answer it in this way: I must have loaned her the money, or she would ■not have given me the note.” In the continuation of his examination he ■stated, what was probably the truth, that he had become so old that he did not recollect much of anything, and that he hardly knew whether he was dead ■or alive; that he had no present recollection in regard to any of the transa» tians; and that the only basis for his testimony was that the notes were then before him. With this extract from the report of his testimony, it is impossible to see how any weight whatever could be given to anything lie stated i.u aid of his action; and yet the learned referee, as appears in his opinion, allowed it to largely affect his judgment in deciding the case. Of the plaintiff as a witness, it need only be said that he was a superannuated old man, who had survived his memory, and who had, of modern events, only a confused and unreliable remembrance, just as likely to be wrong as right, and entirely uncertain of either; just such a person as could easily be used as a medium, in the hands of his keeper, to perpetrate fraud. And it may be possible that, in the broken' condition of his mind, he had a glimmering recollection of some foul work in relation to the notes during the life-time of the testatrix, when he stated that he did not think he ever took the notes out of their hiding-place, and that he kept them hid away.

Without the testimony of the plaintiff, the recovery is not sufficiently supported, and ought not to stand. The case, then, rests upon the testimony of the witnesses Van Antwerp, Margaret Flaekhart, and Thomas H. Flaekhart, her husband.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.Y.S. 221, 5 Silv. Sup. 72, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 233, 54 Hun 639, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-verry-v-schuyler-nysupct-1889.