23 Barb. 571 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
This case comes within the rule, that entries made by a third person in thé usual course of professional employment, or of a clerkship, or agency, are, after the death of the persons making them, competent evidence as being part of the res gestee. The cases in support and illustrative of this rule, are very numerous. Many of them will be found collected in 1 Greenl. Ev. »§ 115,116, 117 ; 1 Smith’s Lead. Cases, (Price v. The Earl of Torrington, and íiotes, commencing at p. 139.) Among the cases of this kind in this state, are Merrill v. The Ithaca and Owe-go R. R. Co. (16 Wend. 586;) Sheldon v. Benham, (4 Hill, 129 ;) Brewster v. Doane, (2 id. 537.) In the case last cited, Bronson, J., who delivered the opinion of the court, says: “ The rule is that entries and memoranda made in the usual course of business, by notaries, clerks and other persons, may be received in evidence after the death of the person who made them.” It is not necessary, as appears by several of the cases, that there should be an absolute duty, on doing an act, to make an entry of it, to render the entry admissible
It is made a point, that numerous births, embracing a period of several months, appeared by the book to have been entered at one time, and that in many instances the entries did not succeed each other in the order of time; but the case does not contain a copy of the book, or such a description of it that the court can see this is so; hence the point cannot be regarded.
The order appealed from, denying a new trial, must be affirmed with costs.
T. R. Strong, Welles and Smith, Justices.]