Haughey v. Wright

19 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 179
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 19 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 179 (Haughey v. Wright) 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
Haughey v. Wright, 19 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 179 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1877).

Opinion

Talcott, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff entered on the report of a referee. The action was upon a promissory note claimed to have been given by the defendants as copartners, to the intestate in his lifetime.

The defense was, that the note sued on was a forgery. The appellant seeks .a reversal of the judgment on the ground that the referee made erroneous rulings concerning the admission and rejection of evidence.

The referee allowed questions to be put to witness to show that the body ” of the note, as well as the signature, was in the handwriting of the defendant Smith. The appellant objects to this evidence as immaterial and that it leads to a comparison of hands. A com parison of hands between papers legitimately in evidence in the case for other purposes is not inadmissible, but the inquiry as to the handwriting of the body of the note was particularly relevant in this case, as the defendants claimed that they never gave a note for $300, but did give one for $250. To prove, therefore, that the whole note, including the amount, was in the handwriting of Smith, one of the defendants, was pertinent. The defendants also excepted to the exclusions of certain questions which they proposed to put to the defendant Smith. All of which were attempts to prove by him that he did not sign the note, which, in the various forms in which the questions were worded, were objected to by the plaintiff as incompetent under the three hundred and ninety-ninth section of the Code. The note purported to have been made to Andrew Bradley, the deceased, personally; prvma facie, therefore, the plaintiff, when proving the genuineness of the note, proved a contract made with the deceased, personally.

The defendant, it seems, admitted the giving of a note by the defendants, who wei’e partners, to the deceased, personally, on a settlement with him ; it must have been claimed, therefore, that the note sued on was the note given by the defendants, and had been altered in regard to the amount, or that the note in suit had been substituted in place of a $250 note given to the deceased personally. The offer was therefore objectionable, under the three hundred and ninty-ninth section, as it seems that under that section proof that no personal transaction with the deceased took place is equally [181]*181inadmissible with evidence that one did take place, and evidence leading to the inference, that such a transaction did or did not take place personally, with the deceased, is held to be within the mischiefs which the three hundred and ninety-ninth section was designed to guard against. (Dubois v. Baker, 30 N. Y., 355, affirming S. C., 40 Barb., 556; Howell v. Van Siclen, 6 Hun, 116.) The appellant, in his printed points, states that the objection that the testimony was forbidden by the three hundred and ninety-ninth section, was not made; but by a manuscript alteration of the case, it now appears that all the objections to the examination of the defendant Smith, were placed on the same ground as the first objection, which was, that it related to a personal transaction between the defendant and Andrew Bradley, deceased, and was offered against the administratrix of the latter.

The judgment is affirmed.

Present — Talcott, P. J., Siam and Merwin, JJ.

Judgment affirmed.

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Related

Dubois v. . Baker
30 N.Y. 355 (New York Court of Appeals, 1864)
Dubois v. Baker
40 Barb. 556 (New York Supreme Court, 1863)

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haughey-v-wright-nysupct-1877.