36 A.D. 581 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action is against the administrators with the will annexed of Hiram .Crandall, deceased, upon a promissory note in these words :
“ $4,000. Jointly and severally we promise to pay Nellie Petit or bearer four-thousand dollars with use, one year from date, for value received.
“ Dated January 5,-1880
“LEMAN CALKINS,
“ CALVIN L. HATHAWAY, ■
“HIRAM CRANDALL, surety P
One of the defenses was that the note was signed and delivered to Lyman Calkins, the first signer of the note, by Crandall, as his
Upon this trial the plaintiff called Calkins as a witness in his behalf, and he testified that Crandall, when he signed the note, advised him, in case he could not get Nellie Petit to take the note, to apply to the plaintiff, and that after he had tried, but failed to get her to take the note, he procured the plaintiff to take it, and that he immediately told Crandall the facts in full about receiving part of the consideration in money, and the other part in the antecedent debt of about $2,000 due from him to the plaintiff, and Crandall said that it was all right. This testimony, which was apparently decisive of the case, was duly objected to under section 829 of the Code. The objection was overruled upon the authority of Wilcox v. Corwin (117 N. Y. 500). This case is to the effect that the payee of a note does not derive' title “ from, through or under ” the maker, since in the hands of the maker his own promise is worthless, and acquires life and value only by delivery to the payee, who thus acquires original and not derivative title to the note. Here the payee is Nellie Petit or bearer, and the plaintiff, upon delivery to to him, became the original bearer or payee. The defendants adduced evidence tending to prove that Calkins paid Crandall forty dollars to sign the note as surety, and urges that that payment gave him a property interest in the note before its delivery to the payee. But the surety’s promise, like the principal’s, was worthless before the delivery of the note. The promise was to the promisee, and, until it reached his hands, there was none.
In the case cited it did not appear that the deceased maker, whose executors alone defended, was surety for the witness, the other maker of the note, and the court held the latter incompetent to testify
It is urged that the defendants, upon their payment upon this note, could sue Calkins and use this judgment as evidence that they were compelled to do so, and that, therefore, Calkins was disqualified. There is no evidence that the defendants called upon Calkins to defend this action or did anything tantamount to such notice, and, therefore, the judgment does not bind Calkins. (Wallace v. Straus, 113 N. Y. 238.) Moreover, the objection was not understood to rest upon the ground that Calkins was interested with the defendants, but against them.. The test is whether he was a competent witness for the plaintiff — not whether, if the defendants had called him, the plaintiff might have had a valid objection.
W"e have examined the other exceptions urged by the defendants. Some of, them rest upon disputed questions of fact which the court was not asked to submit to the jury. One relates to an abstract proposition of law, the applicability of which to the facts was not pointed out. •• The others are clearly untenable. The case was for the jury, was properly submitted to them, and the judgment should be affirmed.
Section 3238 provides that “ upon an appeal from the final judgment in an action * * * specified in section 3228 of this act, the respondent is entitled to costs upon the affirmance, and the appellant upon the reversal of the judgment appealed from; except
The judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the judgment, of the General Term, and' in effect the order of the Special Term denying the first motion for a new trial,.left the costs of those proceedings undetermined, and, therefore, an application to the court, after the verdict upon the last trial to make the determination was-proper, since when, after successive defeats or a reversal which, vacates all previous orders respecting costs, a party finally prevails,, he has the right to apply to the court for the proper order for costs-in the proceedings by which he has been unjustly vexed. (Helck v. Reinhemier, 14 N. Y. St. Repr. 465 ; Brown v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 24 Abb. N. C. 160.) The Code,, except in the excepted, cases, exempts the executor from the costs of the action upon judgment against him rendered upon the trial. After such judgment,, if he appeal, he is the moving party, and if, upon final judgment, it. it appears that he has appealed in vain, the costs of such appeal may be awarded against him, notwithstanding the exemption accorded him in the first instance. This view was taken in Hunt v. Connor (17 Abb. 466) and Judah v. Stagg's Executors (22 Wend. 641), and we think is still the law.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs, and the order affirrmed, with ten dollars costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs, and order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.