Lapham v. Kelly

35 Vt. 195
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 35 Vt. 195 (Lapham v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lapham v. Kelly, 35 Vt. 195 (Vt. 1862).

Opinion

Peck, J.

This was an action oh a promissory note for $1000, dated April 5th, 1853. The only question litigated before the jury was as to the amount of payments made by the defendant on the note. It appears that some payments were endorsed upon the note, about which there was no dispute. But the defendant claimed and testified that he personally paid to the plaiutiff $150, on the 20th November, 1853, at the tavern at Danby Borough, and the further sum of $200, on the 15th December, 1853, at the Union Store in the same village, both to apply on the note in suit. The plaintiff denied these payments, and testified in substance that no such payments were made. It appears that two other notes for $1000 each were given at'the same time the note in suit was executed, which had been paid from time to time and taken up. All these notes were executed by the defendant to John Y. Lapham, and before paymént were transferred to the plaintiff, to whom all the payments were made. The defendant testified.that when the payments on each of the notes were made, he kept a pass-book, which was the book, and [199]*199the only book, on which his eash»transactions were entered during that period, and that each of the entries on the book was made at the time when the transactions respectively took place. The defendant produced the book on the trial in the county court, and produces it here, it being referred to in the exceptions. The book contains entries, in the- form of charges to the plaintiff, of the two payments in dispute, corresponding in sums and dates with the defendant’s testimony on this point.

This book was offered in evideuce by the defendant as independent evidence to show these payments, and on objection by the plaintiff it was excluded by the court as independent evidence, to which decision the defendant excepted. The court, however, admitted the book as a memorandum made and kept by the defendant, to which he might refer for the purpose of refreshing his memory, and it was treated, as the exceptions state, as being in the case for that purpose. From this we understand the book was treated as evidence, and went to the jury with the other evidence in the case. This seems to be conceded by the defendant’s counsel; at least as far as this, that it went to the jury. But the court decided in thus admitting the book that it was not independent evidence. This decision we think was correct. On inspection of the book, considering the character and purpose of the entries and the defendant’s testimony, the book, in the opinion of the court, is not such a book kept in the regular course of business, as to be admissible as evidence per se, independent of the testimony of the party tending to prove the correctness of the entries of the transaction in dispute; especially as the entries’ are not entries of a transaction creating an indebtedness, like the sale of goods, the performance of services, regularly charged on the book of accounts of the party, but a memorandum of a payment made upon anote in discharge of a debt. vThe entries must be regarded as in the character of a private memorandum, made to preserve the facts in the recollection of the witness. In such cases the entry or memorandum is not independent evidence; it can in general only be used to refresh the recollection of the witness, or as confirmatory of his testimony. The light in which such memoranda are to be regarded, the purpose for which they are to be used, under what circumstances and to what extent [200]*200they may be treated as evidence, is a question which has been? much discussed iu the books, and in relation to which the authorities are far from being uuiform. We think it may safely be said that the authorities establish the proposition recognized in the decision of the county court, that they have not the force of independent evidence, but are dependent on the testimony of the witness that the facts were within his knowledge and recollection when he made the^entries, or memoranda, and that they were correctly made.-''The county court was also right in saying the book was evidence to refresh the recollection of the witness, and in allowing it to go to the jury. Formerly the rule in England seems to have been that such a memorandum could only be used by the witness, and if on reference to it for the purpose of refreshing his memory he could not recollect the facts contained in it, his testimony was excluded, and whether he had a present recollection of the facts or not, the memorandum could not be used or allowed to go to the jury. But a more liberal rule seems now to prevail there. It is now there left to the witness to say whether he has such confidence in the accuracy of the memorandum that he is willing to testify to the fact; if so, his evidence is received, although he at the same time says that he has not a present recollection of the facts. The rule that has latterly prevailed in this country is equally liberal, and in one respect more so, as the memorandum or entry is often allowed to go to the jury with the testimony of the witness. If the witness testifies that the facts were within his knowledge and recollection at the time he made the entry, and is confident that he made it correctly about the time of the transaction, and still recollects the transaction generally, although not all the details of the entry, his evidence is received in connection with the memorandum, and both go to the jury, and the memorandum is regarded as auxiliary to, or confirmatory of the witness, and may also bo used as evidence of the details to supply the present want of recollection, particularly as to names and dates. There are Cases which go further, and hold that it may be used in connection with such evidence as to its having been correctly made at the time of the transaction, although the witness can not recall to his recollection any of the facts indicated by it. Such entries [201]*201are auxiliary evidence, also, when the witness still professes to recollect the facts, as many of the cases hold. This is reasonable, as, on inspection of the entry by the jury, it may contain internal evidence as to the time when it was made, and if made at the date of the transaction, it tends to confirm the witness, as he would be less likely to have forgotten the transaction when he made the entry than when called on to testify, after a lapse of time, without any cotemporaaeous entry or memorandum to refresh his recollection. Hence it is proper that the entry should be submitted to the jury. Some cases are cited from New York by the defendant’s counsel to show that such entries are admissible as independent evidence, but they do not sustain the proposition. Indeed, in one respect those decisions do not go so far as we have already stated the modern rule to be. There they only allow the entry or memorandum to go to the jury, when the witness has not a present recollection of the facts. In such case they admit the entry or memorandum as secondary evidence on the same ground that parol evidence is admitted to prove the contents of a lost written instrument; treating the lost recollection of the witness as they do a lost note or other instrument. In Russell v. The Hudson R. R. R. Co., 17 N. Y. 134, not cited by counsel, the memorandum was read to the' jury in connection with the testimony of the witness, and the judgment was reversed because it did not appear but that the witness recollected and testified to all the facts contained in his memorandum. This case is cited and approved by the court in Gay v. Wead, 22 N. Y. 362, cited by the defendant’s counsel. If we follow that case the error of the county court was in letting the book go to the jury at all.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Vt. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lapham-v-kelly-vt-1862.