Lerche v. . Brasher

10 N.E. 58, 104 N.Y. 157, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 335, 59 Sickels 157, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 578
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 10 N.E. 58 (Lerche v. . Brasher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lerche v. . Brasher, 10 N.E. 58, 104 N.Y. 157, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 335, 59 Sickels 157, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 578 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The plaintiff brought this action, claiming to recover about $2,600 as compensation for services rendered to Mr. Van Wyclc, the defendant’s testator, in the character of his agent and attorney. The contract of employment was proved, beyond all question, by evidence wholly uncontradicted, and of a kind open to no criticism. The services rendered began a few days before January 14, 1880, on which day the plaintiff collected a judgment of about $500 in favor of Van Wyck.

On that day the latter, by a written instrument, the signature to which was proven and not questioned, appointed plaintiff his attorney in fact ” for all matters pertaining to two actions which were specified. That the employment was earlier than that is evident from a letter of Van Wyck, dated December 30, 1879, in which he speaks plainly of the existing relation. Other letters are quite as decisive, and on the 10th day of February, 1880, Van Wyck gave to plaintiff a general power of attorney covering, substantially, the transaction of all his business. The employment was further proved by at least one witness who swore to the statements of the testator to that effect.

The general character of the services contracted for and rendered, was also shown by evidence outside of anything which fell from the plaintiffs. The property of the testator had been taken from him on account of his intemperate habits and placpd in the hands of a committee. Van Wyck had become restored to health and capacity and entitled to receive back and manage his property. The committee had placed the estate in the hands of Morris & Pearsall, his attorneys, and in a letter dated February twenty-seventh, Van Wyck notified plaintiff that they had agreed to deliver the papers if he (Van Wyck) would call for them, and adds: I shall not *161 go and so shall answer. They shall settle with you alone.” That they did so settle the defendant himself proved. The amount of property thus delivered over was about $28,000. The defendant also proved the payment of the Walsh mortgage of $5,500 and the interest upon it to plaintiff. There was thus clear evidence of the employment and the general nature of the services rendered outside of any testimony given by the plaintiff in his own behalf. A verdict was rendered in his favor for $750 or about one-quarter of his claim. A motion was made upon the minutes and the exceptions taken to set aside the verdict and for a new trial, which was granted upon two grounds relating to the admission of evidence. On appeal, the General Term affirmed the order, but for other and different reasons.

The trial judge specified two such errors as the ground of his action. On the hearing, after the plaintiff had described the work he had done, he was asked if he had been paid for it. To this inquiry the defendant objected, as involving a personal transaction with the deceased. The objection was overruled, an exception taken, and the witness answered “no.” The answer negatived a personal transaction with the testator and was equivalent to a declaration that neither the deceased nor his administrator, with the will annexed, had paid for the services rendered. But while the objection was a good one, the evidence was" wholly immaterial. The plaintiff was not required to prove the negative, and payment was an affirmative defense, the burden of establishing which was upon the defendant. Eo evidence in that direction was offered or given, and striking out the inadmissible answer would in no possible respect affect the result reached. We ought not to reverse a judgment on so narrow a ground.

The trial judge further held that it was error to admit the transcript from the register’s office of Eew York of Yan Wyck’s power of attorney.

When first offered it was objected to as secondary evidence and as no proof of the" original. The court said, “ it is no proof that Yan Wyek executed it; it is simply proof that a *162 paper of this kind is on recordand thereupon overruled the objection and defendant excepted. The plaintiff then testified, without objection, that he had had the original in his possession but had lost it, and on a careful search, had been unable to find it. At a later period of the case a transcript of the power of attorney was read in evidence against an objection that there was no proof that Van Wyck ever executed it and the paper was incompetent. By the Revised Statutes (vol. 2 [6th ed.] p. 1153, § 73), a power of attorney authorizing, as did the one in question, the conveyance of real estate may be recorded in the clerk’s office of any county in which the land affected is situate and the record be received in evidence with like effect as a conveyance. My first impression was that'there was not sufficient proof that Van Wyck owned land situated in Mew York county, but a careful reading of the evidence shows that while the proof was not direct and pointed, there is an abundance of it from which the natural and necessary inference of such locality follows. The Code provides (§ 933) that a transcript from a record kept pursuant to law ” in a public office of the State, whose incumbent has an official seal, when properly certified by the officer, is evidence as if the original was produced. Under these provisions the transcript was properly received in evidence.

The General Term, in affirming the order for a new trial, placed no reliance upon the objections thus considered but rested its action upon the much more serious ground that the plaintiff was permitted to state in detail the services he rendered, in the face of an objection that such proof involved a personal transaction with the deceased. The trial judge stated distinctly and carefully what he intended to rule. He said that plaintiff could not testify to an employment or request, but where that was proved by other evidence the party might describe simply the things which he did, provided such acts could have been done in the absence of deceased and without his immediate or personal participation. Acting upon this basis the court excluded all evidence of visits to Van Wyck’s residence, or of facts which Van Wyck, *163 if living, could have directly contradicted by his own oath, and limited the proof to independent facts. These were that plaintiff collected the Erie judgment, the Walsh mortgage and the assets in the hands of the committee, and to effect those results made certain calls upon the committee and his attorneys, and examinations of records in other counties. The only objection taken was a general one to the question with which the inquiry began, and that question was: What was done by you, excepting, of course, personal transactions or communications with the deceased, Mr. Van Wyck, from the time you first commenced your labor down to his death ? ” The objections were thus phrased: “ As incompetent and calling for transactions with deceased.” The question was proper in form. It called for no objectionable proof, and if any was proffered under it the defendant’s duty was to object specifically and move to strike out so much of the answer as exceeded the legitimate scope of the inquiry. Nothing of this kind actually and in terms occurred. The only further objection taken to the evidence, under the provision of the Code, was to the inquiry “how much time” his detailed services occupied.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.E. 58, 104 N.Y. 157, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 335, 59 Sickels 157, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lerche-v-brasher-ny-1887.