New York County National Bank v. Herrman

173 A.D. 814, 160 N.Y.S. 422, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7654

This text of 173 A.D. 814 (New York County National Bank v. Herrman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York County National Bank v. Herrman, 173 A.D. 814, 160 N.Y.S. 422, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7654 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

This action was brought to recover the sum of $75,000 damages claimed to have been suffered by plaintiff by reason of misrepresentations made by defendant as to the cost of labor, material and superintendence furnished in the erection and completion of a bank building for plaintiff at Fourteenth street and Eighth avenue, in the city of New York, which defendant had agreed to erect pursuant to the terms of a written agreement with plaintiff, whereby he was to be repaid the full amount of the moneys expended by him plus a building profit of five percentum on such amount. Defendant’s alleged false representations consisted in his statements to plaintiff that the amount expended by him, including his commissions, aggre • gated $350,718.93, whereas in fact it did not exceed the sum of $275,000. Upon this issue the jury found in favor of defendant, and we should not feel called upon to disturb that conclu[816]*816sion save for reversible errors committed upon the trial. This view of the case renders unnecessary a review of the testimony, except as it is relevant to the errors in question. The first of these was in the admission in evidence of the testimony given upon the former trial of this action by Maude M. Ebright, a witness called on behalf of the defendant. She was his bookkeeper during the time of the transactions in question, and her testimony, on direct and cross-examination, covers some twenty-five pages of the printed record. Between the time of the two trials defendant claimed to have found hundreds of checks which he had previously testified were destroyed. When defendant’s counsel sought to read her testimony the following colloquy took place: “Mr. Greene: I offer now to read the testimony given at the last trial of this action by Maude M. Ebright, who was called as a witness on behalf of the defendant, and duly sworn. This offer is made under Section 830 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and I state that we have made effort to get the witness in the State, and that she is a resident of Xenia, Ohio, and we have been unable to procure her attendance at this trial. Mr. Kellogg: I object to the testimony as incompetent, under Section 830, and as injurious to the rights of the plaintiff who desires particularly to examine this witness, she being a bookkeeper, upon the questions of the checks in the Philip Herrman’s account, of which she kept a record, and as to which, on the testimony taken before trial of the defendant, and the testimony of the defendant taken at the last trial, the defendant swore he had destroyed, and they being destroyed and not being accessible at the moment she was examined, I had no opportunity to examine about it. Further, on the ground that there is no competent proof that she lived in Xenia, Ohio, or proof that proper effort had been mado to get her here. It would have been competent to have taken her testimony by open commission, where she could have been examined in relation to the new facts developed by the finding of these checks, and I claim it is not competent under Section 830 of the Code as it now stands. (Objection overruled; exception.)”

Upon the former trial the witness testified as follows: “Q. Where do you live % A. 2 Bank street, city Q. For some time [817]*817past, where have you heen, in what city ? A: Zeno (sic), Ohio. Q. You were there on account of the illness of your aunt ? A. Yes. Q. You came here at my request for the purpose of testifying on this trial, did you not ? A. Yes.”

Section 830 of the Code of Civil Procedure, under which this testimony was sought to be read, is applicable “where a party or witness has died or become insane or, being a nonresident of this State, has departed from the State since or during the trial of an action,” and provides for the receipt in evidence upon' a new trial of the evidence given by such party or witness upon the former trial. But it is apparent that to satisfy the court that the provisions of the section are applicable and that the former evidence is admissible, the party offering the prior testimony must produce proof that the requirements of the section have been complied with and it must be incorporated in the record so that in case of an appeal the appellate courts may be in a position to see upon what state of facts the admissibility of the evidence was determined. No mere hearsay statement of counsel can furnish a basis of such determination, and that is all that is present here. In fact there is not even proof that the witness was a nonresident, for upon the former trial she claimed to be a resident of New York city, only temporarily sojourning in Ohio. Defendant’s counsel now seeks to support the ruling by setting forth in his brief certain letters and a telegram to his client which he says “ were exhibited to the trial judge and satisfied him as to'Hiss Ebright’s non-residence,” but they are not included in the record on appeal, and there is no reference to them therein nor even a hint that they were before the trial court. An examination of the testimony thus improperly received shows that it was of sufficient materiality for the ruling to constitute reversible error. Further error was committed in refusing to strike out certain testimony by the experts Rufus H. Brown and Hugh Getty, called on behalf of the defendant, and permitting the jury to consider the same. Of the total amount expended by defendant on the building in question as shown in plaintiff’s Exhibit A26%, claimed to have been part of defendant’s representations to plaintiff, the [818]*818sum of $42,000 was entered as “Labor” representing work done under defendant’s supervision for labor, and not represented by contract with other parties nor by incidental bills. These items were set forth in an exhibit some twenty-eight pages in length (defendant’s Exhibit 87), but of necessity it was somewhat general in its character, and in many cases lacked details of the character and extent of the labor and the size of the area embraced in the work. Plaintiff had introduced the evidence of an expert who testified that the reasonable value of the work was $24,613, a discrepancy of over $17,000. Defendant called an expert, Frederick G. Murray," who after an examination of the plans and specifications, prepared estimates of the quantities of the materials used in the work, which was received in evidence as defendant’s Exhibit 86. Based on the two exhibits the testimony of both Getty and Brown agreed that the value of the labor in question was $41,912.12, or substantially as defendant claimed it to be ($42,000). But upon cross-examination of the witness Getty it appeared that when he and Brown made up their estimates of values defendant was present “ to explain; ” and further, referring to the transactions of the witness with defendant: “Q. And there you asked him fora detailed statement? A. "Yes, sir. Q. And he said he had none, but he would make one up ? A. We told him how to make it; told him to make it up in detail so that we could understand it from the plans and specifications, together with the details. Q. And he said he would "make it up ? A. Said he would. Q. And then he came back sometime within the month, with this statement? A. Yes, sir. Q. Just prepared as it is here ? A. Just prepared as it is there. Q. And then he explained it, did he not ? A. He did. Q. Explained the statement himself ? A. He did, because we questioned him on the whole thing. Q. Questioned him on the whole'thing ? A. Yes, sir. Q. From the beginning to the end ? A. Yes, sir. Q. And of course you acted partially on his statement? A. We certainly did, together with the plans and specifications. Q. Certainly did ? A. Together with the plans and specifications.

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Bluebook (online)
173 A.D. 814, 160 N.Y.S. 422, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-county-national-bank-v-herrman-nyappdiv-1916.