Purinton v. Purinton

63 A. 925, 101 Me. 250, 1906 Me. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 19, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 63 A. 925 (Purinton v. Purinton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purinton v. Purinton, 63 A. 925, 101 Me. 250, 1906 Me. LEXIS 21 (Me. 1906).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This case involves a libel for divorce and comes up on exceptions to the admission of certain testimony. The charges in the libel were failure to support and cruel and abusive treatment. The answer of the libellee was a denial of every allegation laid in the libel as a cause for divorce and every specification offered therein under the allegations; and also a denial of the allegation in the libel that the libellant had been faithful to her marriage obligations ever since she became his wife and charged that on the contrary during the same time she had offered him extreme and continuous provocation and that her conduct during this time had been such as would have justified all that she charged or could truly allege against him and that during- the same time her conduct with relation to men other than her husband, had been immodest, improper, scandalous, [252]*252indecent and criminal. Among the witnesses called by the defendant was one James Colby, who testified that soon after the marriage of the parties he carried numerous letters between this libellant and one Frank Bartlett for whom Mrs. Purinton had done housework before her marriage with the libellee, and that the libellant had often read aloud to the witness the contents of letters written by said Bartlett to her-and by her to him, and the defendant’s counsel asked the witness to give in testimony such portions of the letters so read or stated to him by the libellant as he could remember. No effort had been made by the libellee to procure the letters and no notice had been given by the libellant to produce any such letters as she might have in her possession. The libellant’s counsel objected to such inquiry but the court allowed the witness to testify as to what was read or stated in them by the libellant. This ruling presents the first ground of exception.

The libellant claims that the letters themselves, if any such letters ever existed, were the best evidence of the contents of the letters and that no secondary proof of their contents should be received, until it was shown that the libellee had made all reasonable effort to obtain the letters. In other words, that the evidence offered to prove the contents of these letters or any part of them fell within the usual rule relating to the proof of the contents of written instruments. But we hardly think this position is tenable.

The case shows and the libellee contends that this evidence was not offered to prove the contents of the letters but the statements or admissions of the libellant herself as to some of the statements contained in these letters. Proof of her voluntary admissions against her own interest would clearly be admissible by the testimony of any competent witness who might have heard such admissions. We are unable to see why the source of her admissions, whether made by her as voluntary statements of her own, purporting to be quotations from memory or to be read from some writing, should' modify the general rule with respect to their proof. When one voluntarily and without solicitation reads the whole or a portion of a letter or writing to another, the party hearing does not undertake to repeat [253]*253the contents of the original writing but only what the person, purporting to read or state, has said. This is entirely different from an attempt on the part of a witness, who, having read a letter himself, undertakes to testify to its contents when the letter of course is the best evidence. But when a party voluntarily assumes to state what is in a letter, or to read a portion of a letter, to another, then such statement assumes the form of an admission by the party holding the letter, and testimony of such admission becomes primary evidence under the general rule with reference to proof of admissions.

The testimony of Colby does not assume to give the legal effect of the letters but shows to the extent of his recollection what was said by the libellant to have been their terms and import.

The libellee’s legal position is fortified by authority as well as reason. 16 Cyc. page 944, lays down this rule : “When it is sought to use a written statement as an admission the “best evidence rule,” so called, does not apply; and a copy of a letter, for example, is competent when identified, without accounting for the original.”

In Kelly v. McKenna, 18 Mich. 381, it was held that the copy of a letter which the writer of the original had admitted in its leadiug points to be a correct copy, was as to these points converted into admissions by him and became original evidence. The court said : “ It was of no consequence that the paper was a copy of the letter he had written. When he made its contents identical with his declaration, the paper became an original for the purpose of showing his declaration to Bruce.” So in the case at bar, the testimony of Colby became primary for the purpose of showing the declarations of the libellant which purported to be identical with the letters from which she was quoting.

In Smith v. Palmer, 6 Cushing, 513, the court say : “The admissions of a party stands on distinct grounds. The admissions of a party are not open to the same objection which belongs to parol^ evidence from other sources. A party’s own statements and admissions are ill all eases admissible in evidence against him, though such statements and admissions may involve what must necessarily be contained in some writing, deed or record. Thus, the statement of a party that certain lands had been conveyed might be admitted, [254]*254though the conveyance must he by deed or record. The general principle as to the production of written- evidence, as the best evidence does not apply to the admissions of parties; as what a party admits against himself may reasonably be taken to be true.”

In 1 Greenl. Ev. secs. 96 and 97, this rule is laid down : “It appears that the prevailing doctrine in England and this country is that a verbal admission of the contents of a writing by a party himself will supersede the necessity of giving notice to produce it; in other words, that “said admissions being made against the party’s own interest can be used as primary evidence of the contents of a writing against him.” In note A of section 96, above cited, it is said that while the rule as stated is denied in Ireland and New York, it is “ the prevalent opinion in the United States.”

In Blackington v. Rockland, 66 Maine, 332, involving the proof of a notice to a town for injuries received upon a defective highway, in which the objection was raised that the records of the city were not competent evidence to show that a bill for damages had been presented without the production of the bill itself, our court held: “It has been decided that oral admissions of a party are admissible evidence of facts though the facts are established by some writing. The records here would in effect be equivalent to the oral admission of an individual party or more than that.” In this opinion the court also adopts the English decision in Slatterie v. Pooley, 6 M. & W. 664, which is referred to by Greenl. in Note A, supra, as the leading English case on this point.

In Loomis v. Wadhams, 8 Drake, 557, the court adopts the following quotations from Mr. Justice Parke: “What a party says is evidence agaiust himself as an admission, whether it relates to the contents of a written paper or to anything else.

In Clarke v. Warwick Cycle Mfg. Co., 174 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A. 925, 101 Me. 250, 1906 Me. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purinton-v-purinton-me-1906.