Insurance Co. of North America v. Guardiola
This text of 129 U.S. 642 (Insurance Co. of North America v. Guardiola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The principal controversy at the trial was whether the cargo shipped consisted of 531 hogsheads, or of 368 hogsheads only.
Upon this, question thfere was much conflicting evidence, and the plaintiffs introduced a number of depositions, taken under commission, at Sagua, including those of the plaintiffs themselves as to what took place at their warehouse, and those of their shipping agents as to what took place at the port some twenty miles below. Annexed to the deposition of one of the plaintiffs were letters written to them by their shipping agents, at the time of the successive shipments, stating the number of hogsheads shipped. Upon these letters being offered in evidence by the plaintiffs, the defendant objected that 'they were irrelevant and incompetent, and duly excepted to the ruling of the court admitting them.
It is too clear for discussion, that these letters, written to *643 the plaintiffs by their own agents, were no part of the transaction of shipping the sugar, but were mere reports by the agents to their principals, and were incompetent, either in themselves, or in corroboration of the testimony of the agents, to- prove the facts recited in the letters, against third persons. Freeborn v. Smith, 2 Wall. 160, 176; Dwyer v. Dunbar, 5 Wall. 318; United States v. Corwin, ante, 381.
Upon the exceptions to other rulings we give no opinion, because they may be presented in a different aspect upon another trial. To avoid misapprehension, it may be added that, according to the rule heretofore laid down by this court, objections to copies of documents or memoranda, embodied, in or annexed to the depositions, might perhaps more properly have been made by motion to suppress them before the trial, so as to afford opportunity to produce the originals, when those would be competent evidence. York County v. Central Railroad, 3 Wall. 107; Blackburn v. Crawfords, 3 Wall. 175, 191.
But the letters do the plaintiffs from their owii agents were absolutely incompetent, and their admission in evidence clearly tended to prejudice the defendant with the jury. Upon this ground
The judgment of the Circuit Court must be remersed, and the case remanded with directions to set-aside the verdict and to order a new trial.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
129 U.S. 642, 9 S. Ct. 425, 32 L. Ed. 802, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-of-north-america-v-guardiola-scotus-1889.