| Superior Court of New Hampshire | Jul 15, 1849

Gilchrist, C. J.

If we assume that the object of the defendants was to prove at the trial that the note in suit had been substituted for the one against Emery alone, which Harvey had been employed to collect, and that there . were special facts and circumstances which would render 'this substituted security invalid in the hands of the plaintiffs, as a ground of the present action, the question to be decided is, whether these facts which we have supposed, or any of them, might properly have been proved by declarations or admissions made by Harvey, in May, 1847.

The ground upon which the acts or declarations of an agent are admitted to be given in evidence to bind his principal is, that the agent has directly, or by reasonable implication from the nature of the business he is charged with, the instructions of his principal to perform those acts, or to make those declarations; that they form a part of the business he is employed to transact. As, where an agent is employed to settle with laborers, his admission that a sum is due to one of them is evidence against his principal that such is the fact. 2 Stark. Ev. 57. Such an admission results fairly from the exigencies of the business the agent is employed to transact, and is clearly a part of it, and to every intent the act of the principal himself.

A very different state of facts was presented in Woods v. Banks, 14 N. H. 113. There the declarations of laborers, *167employed in cutting and hauling logs, that the logs were taken from a particular lot of land, were offered as evidence of that fact; and it was held, upon the clearest principles, that they were not competent for such a purpose. These men were the agents, indeed, of the defendant, but their authority and duty were simply to cut and haul the timber, and it was no part of that business to answer inquiries as to where they found it.

These cases will suffice to illustrate the principle on which the declarations of an agent are admitted in evidence to bind his employer. The mere circumstance of their having been made of and concerning the business he was employed in, does not give them any such effect, unless the servant had been instructed to make them, or unless they were so connected with the service that they became necessary in the due and effective discharge of it.

The original employment of Harvey was to collect the note which the plaintiff formerly held against Emery ; and suppose the aid he gave the officer, in making service of the writ in the present action, was in continuation of that agency, it does not appear to have been any part of it, or necessary to the proper discharge of it, to have made the admissions suggested in the case. The party offering them does not appear to show that the plaintiff had given the agent any instructions which could have required or authorized him, in behalf of his principal, to make the admissions.

His having made the supposed admissions seems to be of no avail, unless as evidence that the facts admitted are true ; and if the agent were to be examined as a witness, the proper inquiry would seem to be, not what admissions he made in May, concerning the transactions of the preceding December, but what were the transactions of the earlier period in point of fact.

For these reasons, we are clearly of the opinion that the evidence was properly rejected at the trial, and that there must be Judgment on the verdict.

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