204 N.Y. 223 | NY | 1912
This action was brought to recover possession of a diamond ring which plaintiff alleged that the defendant unlawfully withheld from her, the true owner. The answer was a general denial.
On the trial as a witness for the plaintiff one Ash testified in substance that the plaintiff purchased the ring of him and paid for it, and that at the time it was delivered, by parol agreement between the plaintiff and defendant's intestate, Doughan, the ring was loaned to the latter, the title and ownership being retained by the plaintiff.
It is claimed that this evidence was incompetent under that portion of section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure which provides, "Upon the trial of an action * * * a party or a person interested in the event, or a person from, through or under whom such a party or interested person derives his interest or title, by assignment or otherwise, shall not be examined as a witness, in his own behalf or interest, or in behalf of the party succeeding to his title or interest, against the * * * administrator * * * of a deceased person, * * * concerning a personal transaction or communication between the witness and the deceased person * * *."
It is clear that on the theory outlined by Ash's testimony he was not "a person interested in the event" of this action. He had sold the ring and received his pay therefor, and it made not the slightest difference to him directly or indirectly whether subsequently the ownership of the ring remained in plaintiff or passed to defendant's intestate.
Neither do I think that he was the person "from, through or under whom" plaintiff "derives his (her) interest or title by assignment or otherwise" in this action, within the meaning of the Code. *226
In construing the language last quoted we should keep in mind the fundamental purpose of section 829. This, of course, was to prevent a person who was or who might be assumed to be a partisan witness from giving his version of a transaction with another who was deceased and could not speak. In effectuating this purpose the Code naturally took into account a person or party who was directly and legally interested in the event of the suit. It also included a person under whom as assignor or otherwise a party or interested person derived his interest or title, and which assignor would be morally and indirectly, if not legally and directly, interested in maintaining the validity and integrity of the assignment, and, therefore, to that extent would be a biased witness.
It will be seen at once that Ash did not come within the spirit of this provision concerning assignors. He made no assignment or transfer to plaintiff which was involved in this action. He was not in any manner responsible for or legally or morally obligated to maintain the agreement on which plaintiff bases this suit. It would neither affect him pecuniarily nor impeach him morally if the plaintiff failed in her present claim which lay entirely between her and the defendant as Doughan's representative.
Neither, as it seems to me, does Ash come within the letter of the statute as the "person from, through or under whom" plaintiff "derives his (her) interest or title by assignment." He sold her the ring. But this action is based on the alleged subsequent wrongful detention of the ring by defendant. Under the pleadings and evidence in this case all that it was necessary for plaintiff to prove was her possession and apparent ownership of the ring and her arrangement with Doughan, and certainly Ash, although the original vendor of the property, was not the assignor of the interest or claim thus involved herein. We must not overlook the difference between the original sale of the article and its subsequent conversion as against the vendee by a third *227 party. Legally they are distinct and separate transactions and it is the latter one which is involved in this action. Even if it should be assumed that defendant's denial did put in issue the original sale by Ash to plaintiff, it was competent for the former to testify concerning that because in a legal sense it did not and could not involve a transaction with the deceased.
While no decision has been found which considers the precise conditions appearing in this case, there are some based on facts so analogous as to make them in my opinion authorities for the views which have been expressed.
In McGinn v. Worden (3 E.D. Smith, 355) the question was presented whether the vendor of personal property was "an assignor of the thing in action or contract," under section 399 of the Code as it then was, in an action brought by the vendee to recover for the illegal detention of the article sold by a third party. It was held that he was not, the court saying, "that the assignment of a claim for damages sustained by the alleged assignor by the detention of his property, is very different from a transfer of the title to property belonging to another, which vests in the transferee a right to demand and receive the property itself * * *. The first case is an assignment of a thing in action; a mere claim lying in action, and in action only. The second is a sale of property under which the purchaser acquired title to the thing itself."
In Rockwell v. Peck (
In Squire v. Greene (
In Rank v. Grote (
Finally it is urged that even if it be assumed that on the evidence as given by Ash he was not disqualified from testifying to the transactions with the dead man concerning the ring, it was improper to permit him by his testimony to give such form to the transaction as would qualify him to be a witness; that it violates the spirit of section 829 to permit a witness by his own testimony to create such conditions surrounding the transactions of a deceased person as will permit him to testify concerning them, because this basic testimony may itself involve the question of transactions with the deceased. I believe there are several answers to this contention in this case.
In the first place the appellant seems to assume that it *230
was incumbent on the respondent to establish that Ash was not disqualified. The reverse, of course, is the rule, and there was no presumption of disqualification which would prevail in the absence of evidence removing it. (Cary v. White,
In the second place it seems to be the rule that within limits a witness who might be disqualified may by his own testimony show the existence of conditions permitting him to testify concerning the acts of a deceased person. This question has been involved commonly in the case of an interested witness offered for the purpose of proving declarations of a deceased person in a conversation with a third party in which the proposed witness took no part, and while it has been questioned whether the witness might by his own testimony establish his aloofness from the conversation for the purpose of permitting him to testify concerning what was said by the deceased (Petrie v. Petrie,
25 N.Y.S.R. 309, 312), this has repeatedly been allowed, and sometimes apparently where the question was fairly raised. (Lobdell v. Lobdell,
In the third place, at the time Ash gave his testimony, the plaintiff herself, without objection and without contradiction, had described the transactions between Ash and herself, and herself and the deceased person in substance in the same manner as did Ash, and, therefore, by her testimony the nature of the transactions with the deceased person already appeared in such a manner as to make Ash a qualified witness if the views heretofore given are correct.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
GRAY, WERNER, CHASE and COLLIN, JJ., concur with HISCOCK, J.; CULLEN, Ch. J., dissents; WILLARD BARTLETT, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed. *231