Peyton v. Hallett

1 Cai. Cas. 363
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1803
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1 Cai. Cas. 363 (Peyton v. Hallett) 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
Peyton v. Hallett, 1 Cai. Cas. 363 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1803).

Opinion

Livingston, J.

Show how the interest here does not incapacitate.

[465]*465Against us some maxims and some decisions have been relied on, which, however, it is conceived, do not in the least invalidate the force of our arguments. It is said that the order in favor of White created a lien on the property in' the hands of the agent. Allowing this to be so, that lien was but a possibility. There might have been five hundred previous orders, each to be preferred to this; or the agent himself might have had claims more than enough to absorb the whole of the funds when in his possession. That equitable liens should work legal incompetence is per fectly new in law. If it be so ruled, the court may, per[466]*466haps, see the doctrine of incompetence pervade cases as yet but little supposed to be within its influence.

The case of a mortgagee being inadmissible m an ejectment to testify for his mortgagor, is widely different from this. There the mortgagee has a direct legal interest, by the operation of a legal instrument. His mortgage gives him an interest at law.

I am aware that, after receipt of the sums in demand, there may, perhaps, be a remedy at common law for recovey of the amount of the order; that an action for money had and received may be maintained. But let it be remembered, •this species of proceeding is, in its nature, like a bill in chancery. It admits of every equitable plea as a defence; set-offs, prior liens, and the whole train of occurrences which would give the defendant a title to prefer others to the plaintiff. The cases from Vezey, senior, and Vesey, junior, are nothing more than chancery decisions respecting funds in possession, and Powel v. Gordon, (2 Esp. 735,) is an authority directly in our favor. There the witness had a power of attorney to receive the money when recovered, so that the fund out of which his debt was to be paid, would have come into his own hands ; but your honors will [*371] please to observe that Lord Kenyon asked *him if he was willing to permit any other person to- _ receive the money, and it was not till he refused this that he was deemed incompetent. The reasoning, then, of this decision is, that had the money gone into the hands of another, the witness would have been admissible, though it is certain his letter of attorney would have warranted him in demanding it from the receiver. The possibility of intervening claims did away the objection. So with us, as the money was not to go into White’s hands, but into those . of another, he stands precisely in the situation of the witness in Powel v. Gordon, had he consented to another’s receiving the sum in litigation.

It has, therefore, it is presumed, been shown,

[467]*4671st. That objections run more to the credit tnan to the competence of witnesses.

2d. That to affect the competence, the interest must be immediate.

3d. That White’s interest was not immediate, but consequential. ■

4th. That admitting a lien to have been created by the order, that does not vary the matter.

5th. That the very case of a creditor witness was put by the whole court of Icing’s bench,' and allowed not to incapacitate; and

6th. That the inferences, unavoidably resulting from Powel v. Gordon, fully establish the competence of White.

The reasoning antecedently used on this point, cannot, it is thought, be better concluded than in the words of Mr. Fonblanque, 2 Fonb. 457, when speaking of the rule respecting the interest of witnesses in causes, on the trials of which they are brought to give evidence; it is, he says, “the most flexible in its application of any.”

The next objection to which it is necessary to advert, is, •‘that paroi testimony of ownership was inadmissible.” For this it has been relied on, that the register act has made a certificate of registry a legal record. It surely will never be imposed on me to demonstrate that such an instrument, or the book in which it is kept, is not a legal record, in the technical sense of the word, import- .[372] ing a verity which admits not of being controverted or substantiated by oral proof. I shall only observe, it has been ruled by Lord Kenyon, that exercising acts of ownership, paying of men,^directing the loading, &c. were sufficient testimony of interest in a vessel. For, in commercial contracts, the highest degree of evidence is not always required. The purpose of the register act was not to make the proceedings under it of record, but merely for state reasons, to enable to collect the duties on tonnage, by ascertaining what ships belong to foreigners, and what are our own.

[468]*468It is, thirdly, insisted by the defendants, that as the aban' donment was made in writing, and notice to produce it not given, paroi proof of the abandonment ought not to have been received.

It is worthy of observation that the abandonment is not denied; it is only asked that we should not be permitted to show it. It cannot be argued that it is indispensable to make the abandonment in writing. We admit it to be usually so done: that however, is nothing more than matter of caution. It was, on that account, done here. But there is no case to show we were obliged to do it. If so, we may prove the contents or effect of the letter of abandonment, without notice to produce it, because it now becomes a fact, like every other, to be established by paroi testimony.

In order to decide on the necessity of giving a notice to produce any written paper served on the opposite party, we have only to call to mind the reasons why it is in any case required. They are, lest a misrepresentation should be made of any fact which constitutes the foundation of the wtion, and which, though in possession of the opposite side, yet being unnecessary to his case, might not be brought by him. When, therefore, the contents of the paper in question are not the foundation of the action, a notice to produce it is totally superfluous. Therefore, in cases of notices to quit; notices to a magistrate previously to [*373] commencing an action *against him; the demand in writing of a warrant before proceeding against an officer, or any similar case, notice to produce the notice, need not be given. Jory v. Orchard, 2 Bos. & Pull. 39. So an attorney’s bill, on which an action has been brought,, may be proved without notice to produce the one delivered under the statute. Anderson v. May, 2 Bos. & Pull. 237. So, payment of rent by a tenant in possession can be established, without notice to produce the receipt. Bunn. Eject. 289.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Cai. Cas. 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyton-v-hallett-nysupct-1803.