Thallhimer v. Brinckerhoff

4 Wend. 394
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 4 Wend. 394 (Thallhimer v. Brinckerhoff) 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
Thallhimer v. Brinckerhoff, 4 Wend. 394 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1830).

Opinion

[396]*396 By the Court,

Marcy, J.

The decision of the court in 0 Qgwen, 90, where this cause is reported on a motion for a new tr¡al on the part of the defendant, (a verdict than having ^een ^oun^ f°r the plaintiffj) disposes of most of the questions presented by the case now brought before us. There is one question, however, arising on the present case which was not then under consideration.

It is contended that improper evidence was admitted to establish the settlement between the defendant and Henry R. Teller. The defendant attempted to shew, and I think did show sufficiently, that Teller was the plaintiff’s agent in relation to the business out of which the claim embraced in this suit arose. The defence on the trial was, that the defendant had in good faith paid over the money that the plaintiff had a right to receive on the compromise of the ejectment suits, to Teller, the plaintiff’s agent, and that the whole matter had been fully settled with him as such agent.

To make out this defence, the defendant was permitted to introduce an account current between him and Teller, the last entry on the debit side of which was in November, 1816. There was no evidence that this account was made out on a settlement between the parties to it, or that it ever had the sanction of Teller before the time when he made an affidavit in March, 1818, which was also received in evidence in behalf of the defendant. In this affidavit Teller says that the allegations and matters in a certain answer put in to a bill in chancery by the defendant are true. The answer contained the allegation of the settlement which the defendant attempted to prove, and the defendant was permitted to read in evidence a part of the answer which was explanatory of the account. It appears to me that the judge erred in receiving this evidence. His decision proceeded on the ground that Teller was the agent of the plaintiff, and that his acts and admissions in relation to the matters within the scope of his agency might be proved against his principal. The agent’s acts are the acts of the principal, and may be proved in the same manner as a party’s own acts. It is to be observed, however, that the specific act of a settlement of the plaintiff’s claim in this case was not attempted tó be proved. As I [397]*397have before observed, there was no proof that the account current had ever been seen by Teller before the date of the affidavit.

Was the affidavit admissible evidence 1 The plaintiff was an entire stranger to the chancery suit in which it was used; he could not, therefore, be concluded or affected by the proceedings or proof in that suit. If upon any principle the affidavit could be received, it must be as the admission of an agent. The general rule on this subject is that what an agent does or says within the scope of his authority is binding upon the principal. Not only the agreement that he makes, but all his declarations affecting or qualifying such agreement» áre binding on the principal; but what an agent says at another time, or of his own authority, is not evidence against the principal. (Starkie on Ev. 4 pt. 42. 3.)

In making the settlement with the defendant, if one was ever made, Teller might be considered the agent of the plaintiff, and all that he did or said on that occasion might properly be received in evidence; but what he said at another time, though it related to the same transaction, was not admissible testimony. It will be recollected that the affidavit was not made until near seventeen months after the last item in the account current.

In the case of Bentham v. Benson, (Gow’s N. P. Rep. 45,) Ch. J. Dallas says, it is not true that where an agency is established the declarations of an agent are admitted in evidence merely because they are his declarations: they are only evidence when they form a part of the contract entered into by the agent on the behalf of his principal: and in that single case they become admissible.” To this effect is the law laid down in the case of Fairlie v, Hastings, (10 Vesey, 123.) Where a party is bound by the act of his agent and the declarations of the agent qualify or affect that act, these declarations may be proved against the principal; 'but they are not proved as admissions or declarations merely, but as a part of the res gesta, The act and the words together make the whole thing to be proved. The fact to be established in this case was the settlement by the agent of the plaintiff with the defendant, or the payment to the agent [398]*398all the monies received on account of the plaintiff. What was done and said at the settlement, or when the monies were actually paid over, might well be proved ; but not Teller’s representation of it, even if it had been made in an hour after the business was closed. The length of time between the adjustment of the accounts and the malting of the”afBdavit seems to me to take away all plausibility for admitting it as proper evidence in this cause.

The defendant’s answer to a bill in chancery in a suit to which the plaintiff was not a party could not have been admitted on any other principle than that it was referred to and its "accuracy established by Teller’s affidavit. The affidavit being decided to be improper evidence, the answer which was admitted on the strength of it must be rejected as improper also. I am therefore of opinion the judge erred in overruling the objection to the affidavit and the defendant’s answer in the chancery suit.

The plaintiff in the course of the trial offered to prove the discharge of Teller under the act to abolish imprisonment. This evidence was objected to and overruled. This decision of the judge is made one of the grounds on which the plaintiff rests his motion for a new trial. The object of this proof was not explained when offered ; nor is its relevancy now perceived; I cannot therefore say that the judge erred in excluding it. The opinion of Sutherland, J., delivered on the former motion for anew trial, appears to me to dispose of all the other questions in the case. (6 Cowen, 90.)

Motion for a new trial granted.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Wend. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thallhimer-v-brinckerhoff-nysupct-1830.