Fairley v. B. R. Smith & Co.

87 N.C. 367
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 87 N.C. 367 (Fairley v. B. R. Smith & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairley v. B. R. Smith & Co., 87 N.C. 367 (N.C. 1882).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

In tbe trial of the issue of damages it became material to ascertain the market price of cotton in Boston between the 1st and 13th days of February 1876, and to prove the value, one Townsend, a clerk and book-keeper in the plaintiff’s employmerit during that period, and who had usually assisted in weighing the cotton bought and sent off, was introduced as a witness on his behalf.' He testified to a knowledge of the market value of cotton in Boston at the date mentioned, and that he derived his information from reading the market reports in the Charlotte Observer, a daily newspaper published in that city, but that his. present recollection of the price was only from having consulted the files of that paper to refresh his memory, the day before.

This testimony after objection was permitted to go to the *368 jury and the exception to its admission constitutes the only matter for consideration on the appeal.

While the witness speaks of refreshing his memory by reference to the telegraphic reports in the columns of the Observer, and recalling what had faded from his recollection, it is plain the evidence is but that what is thus supplied. The witness does not profess to derive, from this and other accessible sources of information, the means of forming an estimate and opinion of his own, for in such case the testimony would be competent; but he manifestly depends upon a single newspaper report alone of the condition of the market and the value of the commodity in a distant city. The witness thus becomes the medium of communication of the published report to the jury, and does not testify as an expert practically conversant with the cotton trade, and giving the. results of his own inquiry and examination obtained from such reliable sources as were within'reach, and confiding in which prudent men would act in the daily transactions of business.

Is evidence derived as this was from reading the reports of the Boston market contained in the columns of a single daily paper issued at Charlotte, competent to go to the jury in proof of the value of cotton in Boston in February, 1876 ?

This question we proceed to consider, and to examine the more important of the many adjudications to be found in the reports.

In Sisson v. Cleveland and Toledo R. R. Co., 14 Mich., 489, the exclusiouof evidence of the state of the market as derived from reports in newspapers was held to be error; and in the subsequent case of Clev. and, Tol. R. R. Co. v. Perkins, 17 Mich., 296, the introduction of the papers themselves was sustained to show the market price of an article, Cooley, J., who delivered the opinion in both cases, stating in the first, the general rule to be, “to admit market reports of such *369 newspapers as the commercial world rely on, as evidence of market values.”

Mr. Justice Story in Alfonzo v. United States, 2 Story, 421, designates one thus testifying, as an expert, and ruled that a witness residing in Boston could testify to the price of sugar at Matanzas, from which place it had been imported, (as could merchants in the latter place,) when he had equal facilities from his actual trade and business in Boston in obtaining knowledge of the market.

None of these cases recognize the competency of such tes-timonj' from one who derives his information from the reports in a single newspaper published at a remote point, and in the absence of any proof of the source from which, it-was obtained, or that it was accepted and acted upon as reliable by prudent business men.

In Lawrent v. Vaughn, 30 Verm. 90, a witness was heard to speak of the market price of peas in Albany, on its appearing that he was engaged in the produce business in that place, as well as in Vermont, and received his information from those with whom he then had business relations.

Similar testimony was received in Lusk v. Druse, 4 Wend., 313, the witness being qualified to speak of the market price of wheat from an examination of the books of large dealers in that article.

In Henkle v. Smith, 21 Ill., 238, the Weekly Gazette was allowed to be introduced as evidence of the market, it being shown that the reports of grain were corrected weekly by the defendants themselves, and were thus in a measure their own declarations. /

In Lawton v. Chase, 108 Mass., 238, a person who had been for many years engaged in sawing and in buying and selling logs in neighboring towns, and had put up a saw mill of his own in the immediate vicinity of the premises, and thus possessing unusual opportunities for acquiring knowledge, was permitted to prove the value of the logs.

*370 So again in Whitney v. Thatcher, 117 Mass., 528, a merchandise broker in Boston, having, as a member of houses which had business relations with each other in that city and in New York, become conversant with sales of bags in the latter place derived from daily prices current lists and daily reports of sales in New York to the Boston firm, was allowed to speak of the price of that commodity in New York, the court declaring “ that it is the experience which he acquires in the ordinary conduct of affairs and from means of information, such as are usually relied on by men• engaged in business for the conduct of that business, that qualifies the witness to-testify.”

But a more recent and more lucid exposition of the principle is contained in the opinion in Wheeler v. Lynch, 60 N. Y., 469. There, the files of a newspaper were offered to show the market value.of wool. After disposing of certain objections to the charge to the jury, Miller, proceeds thus : “ The court was also in error in admitting the shipping and prices-current list without some proof showing how or in what manner it was made up: where the information it contained was obtained, or whether the quotations of prices made were derived from actual sales or otherwise. It is not plain'how a newspaper, containing the prices-current of merchandise, of itself, and aside from any explanation as to the authority from which it was obtained, can be made legitimate evidence of the facts stated. The accuracy and correctness of such publications depend entirely upon the sources from which the information is derived. Mere quotations from other newspapers, or'information obtained from those who have not the means of procuring it, would be entitled to but little, if any weight. The eredit to be given to such testimony must be governed by intrinsic evidence, and cannot be determined by the newspaper itself, without some proof of Icnowledge of the mode -in which the list is made out.”

*371 Mr.

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