Axel v. Kraemer

75 N.J.L. 688 | N.J. | 1908

*692The opinion of the court (the foregoing statement of the case having been made) was delivered by

Gjreen, J.

1. A writ of error is the beginning of a new action in the Appellate Court, and. in such action the assignments of error and joinder therein are the pleadings. Delaney v. Husband, 35 Vroom 275, 276 (1899); Associates of the Jersey Co. v. Davison, 5 Dutcher 415, 418 (1860). To the issues made by these pleadings, which are in this court issues of law — Karnuff v. Kelch, 42 Vroom 558, 561 (1904) —the parties are to be confined. State, Hoey, pros., v. Lewis, Collector, 10 Id. 501, 507 (1877); Lullopp v. Heckman, 41 Id. 272, 273 (1903). In the case in hand the issues of law thus raised involve the illegality of the exclusion at the trial of certain evidence offered by way of cross-examination of the plaintiff and certain evidence offered by way of direct examination of the defendant, as above mentioned. The illegality of such exclusion is averred by the plaintiff in error and denied by the defendant in error.

This notion of the nature of proceedings in error has the effect of relieving us from all obligation to inquire whether the plea of nil debet is, in this case, good under the rules of the Supreme Court, adopted at June Term, a. d. 1885, and amended at November Term, a. d. 1900. See Corbin’s N. J. Court Rules (2d ed.) 46; Id. (3d ed.) 64. The plea would have been bad undoubtedly at common law (1 Chit. PI. (3d Lond. ed.) *469; Stafford v. Little, Barnes Notes 257), but its quality, since the new rules were adopted, we do not find it necessary to determine. It is not intimated that we have even considered the matter.

2. Inasmuch as evidence, in order to be relevant, must be directed and confined to the matters in dispute between the parties, as shown by the pleadings— Crosby v. Wells, 44 Vroom 790, 805 (1906) — it is, however, our place to inquire what the issue which the defendant conceived that he had tendered by the plea, and which the plaintiff accepted as sufficiently tendered in the court below.

Plainly the issue was the existence or non-existence of a *693contract- or contracts for the payment of certain moneys by the defendant to the plaintiff, in consideration of certain indebtednesses, before-time incurred, by the defendant to the plaintiff. The plaintiff averred that there was or were such an implied contract or contracts; the defendant intended to say that there was no such contract — at least, he said that there was no consideration by which such a contract or contracts could be supported; the plaintiff, by his similiter, accepted the issue as tendered.

A contract in which an intention to agree is, as a fact, implied by the law, is, like an express contract, made up of three material parts, to wit, a moving consideration, an agreement to do or to refrain from doing, and a thing to be done or to be left undone, and these stand in this logical order. In the essentials of pleading, notwithstanding certain differences of form (e. g., Chit. PI. (3d Lond. ed.) *36 and ff.; Id. *108 and ff.), there is no distinction between an implied contract and an express contract, because, in either case, the supposed or the actual promise or other contract must be alleged. 1 Chit. PI. (6th Lond. ed.) *302; 1 Chit. Cont. (11th Am. ed.) 80. Nevertheless, there is a distinction in fact, which becomes more clear when we consider the evidence to be adduced. With respect to express contracts, for the most part, the three essential ingredients above mentioned are susceptible of proof; but, with respect to contracts implied by the law, only the existing consideration and the non-observance of the undertaking are susceptible of direct proof. The agreement or undertaking itself is implied, as a fact, from the proven existence of the debt or duty; the intention is merely a presumption by the law from other facts. Consider 1 Pars. Cont. (9th ed.) *7, note; 2 Whart. Ev. (3d ed.), §§ 1226, 1237; Leake Cont. 12; Keener Quasi-Cont. 3, 7; Snedeker v. Everingham, 3 Dutcher 143, 147, 150 (1858). Such a presumption the law raises, however, only so long as the debt or legal duty exists. Could Pl. (3d ed.) 46, 50; Steph. Pl. (4dh Lond. ed.) *18.

Hence, a plea which distinctly puts in issue the essential allegation of an existing indebtedness, which is the considera*694tion of an undertaking to pay moneys, may be treated by the parties and by the trial court as putting in issue the alleged contract itself, which must fall, if the non-existence of the debt or consideration be established. 1 Chit. PI. (3d Lond. ed.) *334, *469-*472; 1 Pars. Cont. *428; Morford v. Vunck, 2 Penn. *1031 (1813). At least, under the assignments of error in this case, it may be held that this court, with a view to determining only the relevancy of evidence, will regard as the issue of fact that which was treated as such by the parties in the court below, without objection.

3. We may now inquire as to the relevancy of the excluded evidence in general.

(a) Under the plea of the general issue in assumpsit, the defendant might, at common law, give in evidence most matters which go in discharge of the defendant’s liability by showing that, at the time of the commencement of the suit, the plaintiff had no cause of action. 1 Scmnd. PI. & Ev. (3d Am. ed.) *338; 1 Chit. PI. *472. However singular such practice may appear, in principle, in actions upon express contracts, it was logical enough when the action was founded upon an implied promise, and, in such cases, evidence in discharge of a liability, once existing, seems to have been first admitted under the plea of non-assumpsit. 1 Chit. PI. *471, *4-73 ; Gould PI. 46, 50. Gilb. *64, rather quaintly observes: “On this issue [non-assumpsit] everything may be given in evidence which disaffirms the contract, or goes to the gist of the action, since, if there be no contract to be performed at the commencement of the action, there could be no trespass for the non-performance of it,” and he instances a release, “for it shows that there was no contract at the time when the action was commenced.”

In Emley v. Perrine, 29 Vroom 472, 473, 474 (1896), the declaration contained only the common counts, and the general issue was pleaded. In considering the evidence offered Justice Magie said: “Upon that plea, until the adoption of the new rules in the reign of William IV., the question was always, whether there was a subsisting debt or cause of action *695at tlie commencement of the suit. This was the system adopted in this country.”

On an indebitatus assumpsit the offering of evidence of pajunent, under the general issue, seems to have been well-known as early as a. d. 1697. See Brown v. Cornish, 1 Ld. Raym. 217; see, also, Van Hatton v. Morse, 2 Id. 787 (1702).

(b) Under the plea of the general issue in debt, any matter might be given in evidence by the defendant at common law which showed that nothing was due at the time of bringing the action, such as performance, or a release, or other matter in discharge of the action. 1 Chit. PI. (3d Bond, ed.) *476; comparewithlOfeii.PI (6th Bond, ed.) *481. “Debt on simple contract, in respect of the evidence, differs in nothing from the action of assumpsit.” 1 Baund. PI. Ev. (3d Am. ed.) *410.

Having already said that this court will regard the issue of fact tendered by the defendant and accepted by the plaintiff in the court below as being, in short, contract or no contract, we now say 'that evidence of payment before action brought was proper under the general issue in either assumpsit or debt at common law, and it has not been suggested that it is otherwise under the new general rules of the Supreme Court, already mentioned. It is obvious that the rationale of admitting evidence of payment in a case like the present is that it disproves a subsisting debt or. legal liability, and so disproves the contract which rests upon such debt or liability as its moving consideration. 6 Gould PI. 48.

It is no objection to this view that the payments proved may not discharge with exactness any debits in the notice annexed to the declaration. In assumpsit, under the general issue, the defendant might offer proof of partial as well as of full payment. Dingee v. Letson, 3 Gr. 259 (1836), citing English cases. The defendant may, it would ss'em, still do so in an action upon contract, the payment being given in evidence not in bar, but in mitigation of damages. 1 Chit. Pl. (6th Bond, ed.) *507; 1 Suth. Dam. (4th ed.), § 167; Dingee v. Letson, supra (at p. 265). Partial payment might *696be thus given in evidence in the English practice, even after the Reg. Gen. Hil. T., 4 Wm. 4. See Shirley v. Jacobs, 4 Dowl. 136 (1835).

4. It is urged, however, for the defendant in error that whatever might be true at common law, the evidence of payments which the defendant below sought to introduce was properly excluded by force of a statute. This statute must, therefore, be considered.

The statute referred to was once section 116 of the Practice act of 1874 (2 Gen. Slat., p. 2552), and dealt with the action of assumpsit only, but in enacting “An act to regulate the practice of courts of law (Revision of 1903),” the legislature took notice of the new rules of the Supreme Court and made the section applicable to any action upon contract. The language of the revised act, so far as it need now be set forth, is as follows:

“When a defendant in any action upon contract shall plead the general issue alone or in connection with other pleas, the plaintiff may make written demand for a specification of the defences intended to be made under such plea * * * in case of the failure of the defendant to comply with such demand, such plea of the general issue shall be taken to import only a denial of the making of the contract sued on.” See Pamph. L. 1903, p. 567, § 104; i)iott Pr. Act 52. This statute was construed with reference to the quantum of proof of the plaintiff in Turner v. Wells, 35 Vroom 269, 274 (1899), but its operation upon the evidence of the defendant is res integra.

Bearing in mind the conclusions already reached, to wit, that the defendant’s plea is to be regarded as putting in issue the essential allegation of the indebtedness which was the consideration of an undertaking to pay moneys, and so putting in issue the alleged contract itself, and that, in support of such plea, the defendant might give evidence of payment of the indebtedness before action brought, in disproof of a subsisting debt, and so of the contract implied in fact from the existence of the debt, we see nothing in the statute cited which imposes any further restriction upon the rights of the *697defendant in the present action. The question is still in substance as stated in Emley v. Perrine, supra. In an action upon an implied contract the defendant may, under a plea of the general issue, deny, by his proofs, the existence, at the time of the commencement of the action, of the alleged indebtednesses which were the consideration of the alleged contracts, or of any of such indebtednesses. In so doing he not only denies the debt or duty, but, in the language of the statute, he denies the contract sued upon.

The defendant below, having offered evidence tending to show payments which, pro ianto, would have discharged his indebtedness, and such evidence having been excluded, there was injurious-error.

o. It is argued on behalf of the plaintiff in error that the excluded evidence of payment, so far as it might have been drawn from the lips of the plaintiff below, was legitimate under the ordinary rules of evidence, and, so far as it might have been given directly by the defendant below, was likewise legitimate.

(a) It will be observed, from the brief extract from the testimony set forth in the foregoing statement, that the plaintiff, in effect, said: “Everything that the defendant owed to me is shown by my books. Every credit to which he was entitled I have therein given to him. He still owes me the balance, $1,564.55.” It is plain, then, that inquiry as to other payments, which the plaintiff ought to have allowed the defendant, by way of credits, would tend to diminish the trustworthiness or impeach the credit of the plaintiff as a witness. Such inquiry was therefore proper under the ordinary rules relating to cross-examination. The rules in this aspect have been so lately expounded by us in Crosby v. Wells, 44 Vroom 790, 803, 804 (1906), that a bare reference to that decision will suffice.

(&) The evidence offered on the examination of the defendant, which was directed to establishing payments by him to the plaintiff, other than and besides those admitted by the plaintiff, was proper from two points of view. It was relevant because it had probative value in support of a material *698proposition, of the defendant. It was relevant because its tendency was to impeach, the testimony of the plaintiff by contradiction from another competent witness. See, on both points, Crosby v. Wells, 44 Vroom 790, 805 (1906).

Nothing having been alleged which should lead to a different conclusion, we think that, by the accepted rules of evidence, the proof of additional payments offered by the defendant should have been received. In the exclusion thereof there was error.

For the errors discussed the judgment of the Union Circuit Court should be reversed, and the record remitted for a new trial.

For affirmance — None.

For reversal — Pitney, Chancellor, The Chief Justice, Swayze, Reed, Trenoi-iard, Bogert, Yredenburgi-i, Yroom, Green, Gray, Dill, J.J. 11.