Harding v. Barney

7 Bosw. 353
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 10, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Bosw. 353 (Harding v. Barney) 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
Harding v. Barney, 7 Bosw. 353 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court. Woodruff, J.

—It is quite apparent that the question whether or not there was in the defendants’ books kept at their office in San Francisco, an entry of the sale of a draft to John Harding, on the 18th of March, 1856, for $3,300, was of the utmost importance. The proofs, irrespective of this question, made it in no slight degree doubtful whether the transaction to which the plaintiff had testified, did not take place at some other office in San Francisco. But if, upon the defendants’ books there was entered in due course of business, such a draft, that fact was conclusive in favor of the plaintiff, not perhaps conclusive as an estoppel, but in the circumstances of this case so determinative and final, as evidence that they received the plaintiff’s money and issued the draft, that a verdict for the defendants would have been against evidence and could not have been sustained.

It is true that it was not the precise question in issue ; the defendants might possibly have received the money and issued the draft and no such entry have been made; but the entry could not have been made unless they had issued the draft which the plaintiff received; so the entry, if proved, directly established according to the inevitable judgment of the jury, the very point in issue between the parties.

The account given of the transaction by the plaintiff, made it in a high degree probable, if not certain, that at the office where it took place, the book or books were used in perfecting it. The testimony on the part of the defendants showed, that when drafts were sold by them at their office, there was made at the time an entry in the books stating the transaction, and particularly an entry of the purport of the draft,'in the margin of the book from which the drafts were taken; and therefore the very question whether the defendants sold to the plaintiff the alleged draft and received his money, might well turn upon the [360]*360conclusion of the jury, from the evidence, that such a draft was entered in the defendants’ books.

In view, then, of the vital importance of the question, the defendants’ counsel requested the judge to charge the jury, that they had no right to infer from Burbank’s testimony, to his conversation with Bell and Washburn at the defendants’ office; that, in truth, he did on a former occasion see in that office a book which a clerk examined in his presence, and said the books showed that such a draft had been given.

It is entirely clear, I think, that as matter of law, no such inference was warranted by Burbank’s testimony, to that conversation. He did not say in any part of his evidence, that he saw such a book, or that the clerk turned to or examined any book, or that the clerk said that the books showed that such a draft had been given, but only that he, (Burbank) told Bell and Washburn so. What he told Bell and Washburn, was not only not legal evidence for any purpose, but it did not prove, nor did it warrant a jury in inferring from it, that the circumstances existed. They were not parties to the suit; such a narration by Burbank to them, whether they denied its truth or were silent, could not legally be taken as an admission that the matters narrated were true. Had this part of Burbank’s testimony been objected to, it must have been excluded. Being given, without objection, it proved nothing, except that Burbank did say to Bell and Washburn what he testifies he said to them.

It does not however follow that the refusal of the judge to give the instruction, was ground of exception. I am not prepared to say, and in this case I do not think it necessary to say or to deny, that counsel may select separate pieces of testimony and in reference to each require an instruction to the jury defining the inferences of fact which they may or may not draw from it. It can readily be perceived, that a practice which allowed this, might lead to great embarrassment, and be so inconvenient as to render the proper and safe conduct of a trial almost impos[361]*361sible. And yet I think it quite clear that it is error to instruct a jury that they may find a material fact from the proofs where there is no legal testimony of such fact; and that it is no less an error to instruct a jury that particular evidence will warrant them in inferring a material fact when no such inference can legally arise therV-’:m.

In this aspect of the subject, the in?' m actually given by the judge, becomes most impc He not only refused to charge that they were not wacc;.:v:edin inferring the facts from the testimony that Burbank r-r sauted to Bell and Washburn, but he said:

“ Burbank’s testimony does not in terms and words allege the fact that the clerk, ontho first occasion when he called, examined the books and said the draft had been drawn, &c.; and it is for •the jury to say how he is to be understood.”

Now the testimony of Burbank was in writing, the language was perfectly intelligible; it did not admit of doubt as to its proper meaning; it meant, and it could not legally be held to mean anything more than its terms legally imported, viz : that he told Bell and Washburn just what he said he told them.

In connection with the defendants’ request, this submission to the jury to say “ how he is to be understood,” seems equivalent to saying, “ I not only refuse to instruct you that you may not infer from this testimony that the books were examined and that the clerk stated that they showed that such a draft had been given, but I do instruct you that you will commit no error if you make that inference ; and not only so, you may, if you think proper, conclude that the witness is to be understood as testifying that the facts are as he stated them to be.” When the particular testimony which is the subject of instruction, will not warrant an inference of a material fact, the court ought not to submit it to the jury as the ground of conjecture, or leave it to them to infer the fact therefrom.

These views are sustained by Manwell v. Briggs, (17 Verm. 176 ;) Evans v. Mengel, (1 Barr. Penn. 68 ;) Gilchrist v. [362]*362Rogers, (6 Watts & Serg. 488 ;) Cobb v. Fogalman, (1 Iredell, 440 ; Hunt v. Toulmin, (1 Stew. & Porter, 178.)

Whether the counsel have or have not a right to call for such specific instructions in relation to facts which are themselves only collateral and not directly in issue, when the court do assume to give specific instructions respecting such facts, those instructions should be correct, or, as I think, an exception must be sustained. Had the judge in this instance simply refused to give the instructions asked for, or if he had contented himself with saying that Burbank had not sworn that the clerk informed him that the draft was given, and examined a book and said that the book showed that the 'draft was given, the argument urged upon us that a judge is not bound to give specific instructions relating to collateral facts, or facts which are not directly in issue, but which, if proved, are only evidence from which, by way of further inference the fact in issue is to be derived, would have had much plausibility at least. But here, according to the charge, as it may well have been understood, the jury were told that they were to say whether Burbank’s testimony imported that the clerk informed him, and did examine the books, and state that the books showed that such draft had .been given.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Bosw. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-v-barney-nysuperctnyc-1860.