149 N.Y.S. 548 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1914
To prove the claim of the plaintiff, a physician, against the' defendant executors for professional services rendered to their testator, the physician’s book of visits was admitted in evidence. As the right of the plaintiff to recover is based exclusively upon the book, it becomes necessary to scrutinize the testimony to determine whether or not error was committed in its admission.
The plaintiff was permitted to testify that the book in question was one in which he kept the accounts of patients visiting'him and whom he treated; that the entries were made by him on the respective dates shown by the entries; that the book showed an account with the decedent; that the page of his account book purporting to show his attendance in this case was an account which he made up and entered each time the decedent came to his office. Besides proving by another physician, who claims to have been present at the plaintiff’s office on the occasion of some visits made by the decedent to the plaintiff and who gave no evidence regarding the book entries, there were
In Swan v. Warner, 197 N. Y. 190, which was an action brought to recover for professional services rendered as a physician, the court reiterated the much cited rule laid down in Vosburgh v. Thayer, 12 Johns. 461, 462, governing the admission of a party’s books “ for the purpose of sustaining his claim in an action like this,” that rule being, “ They ought not to be admitted where there are several charges, unless a foundation is first laid for their admission, by proving that the party had no clerk, .that some of the articles charged have been delivered, that the books produced are the account books of the party, and that he keeps fair and honest accounts, and this by those who have dealt and settled with him.”
In the case at bar, the two witnesses called to prove that they had settled their accounts with the plaintiff from his book were Rae and Overbach. Rae testified that whenever the plaintiff had rendered a bill he paid it; that the account in the book then shown to the witness was an accurate and true statement of the account between him and the plaintiff “ at the time rendered.” When asked whether he ever saw.the book before, he answered that he did not recall; that he did not know whether he ever went to the plaintiff’s office to look at his books; that he never questioned the plaintiff’s bill; that he kept track of all his visits “ but no track of his books.” Nothing testified to by this witness can fairly be said to permit the conclusion to
If this analysis of the testimony is correct, there was nothing left in the case to prove that the plaintiff kept correct books of' account — apart from his own testi
Besides the testimony of the plaintiff above adverted to, namely, that his book showed an account with the decedent of entries made each time the decedent was in his office, the plaintiff was further allowed to testify that the entry in his book of the amount of his claim against the testator was for a bill “ rendered;” that the account of the decedent was never paid; and that the entry therein of $450 represented the amount due for services rendered to the decedent. Inspection of the alleged account, as well as many other entries in the book of the plaintiff for attendance upon other persons, shows that the plaintiff entered dates only (from which it might be inferred that each date .represented a professional visit); that no money charge whatever appears opposite each visit; but that at the end of a group of dates appear the words, “ Sent ” on such and such a date, and the amount opposite that statement. For instance, in this case the entry at the end of the group of visits reads, “ Sent June 28, 1913 — $450.” The total number of visits indicated is thirty, and it may be that they were reasonably worth the aggregate sum of $450; but we have no means of knowing that fact other than the mere entry of that amount upon the book, no attempt having been made to prove the value of the services. The amount entered, without proof of the value of the services, is the amount for which judgment was given against the estate. A more fatal feature of the use of the entry in-evidence is the day on which the bill of $450 was sent, namely, June 28, 1913, and which was subsequent to the death of the defendant’s testator which occurred on June 8, 1913. Practically every question asked of the plaintiff,'-together with the admission of the book
While it would seem from the ruling in Davis v. Seaman, supra, that plaintiff’s own proof of the correctness of his books was erroneously received in that case, as in contravention of the prohibition contained in section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure, it is possible that the case would not have gone so far had the book appeared to have been regularly kept and had there been, in addition, competent evidence of the rendition of some services and the testimony of others who were shown to have settled with plaintiff accord-
The account book rule was said in as recent a ease as Smith v. Smith, 163 N. Y. 171, to be still an important one in the administration of justice in cases where the party kept no clerk able to testify to the truth of the entries in his books and where, unless they are admitted, great inconvenience and a denial of justice may follow.
Where it becomes necessary for a party to identify his books of accounts and to testify that he kept no clerk and that his custom was to make entries therein in the usual course of business, with regularity, I see no reason why such testimony should be regarded as circumventing section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Standing alone it proves nothing, for such testimony by a party is but preliminary to the more important testimony of persons who settled their accounts with him by his books'. In the case of a physician, the book should show visits to patients, regularly entered in the course of professional duties; their total number furnishes a basis for proof by other physicians of value according to the accustomed charges in the locality, and when coupled with independent evidence that some of the visits were actually made and that other patients had settled their accounts with the physician from his books, the entries of his visits or attendance upon them therein stated being correct and true, a physician’s book of visits is then open for the inspection of the court, and, if found free from suspicion and sufficiently orderly to convey intelligence upon perusal, the book becomes competent evidence of the visits before the court or jury, as the case may be.
The plaintiff’s own testimony here, as to his having
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
Blackmar and Kelly, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to abide event.