59 N.Y. 336 | NY | 1874
The principal questions involved in this litigation were disposed of on the former appeal. (
It is suggested that the declarations of White were not, as mere declarations, admissible in evidence against the defendant Jane White. To this we are compelled to answer that *340 neither the objection nor the exclusion of the proposed evidence was put upon that ground, but distinctly upon the force of the three hundred and ninety-ninth section. If that objection had been made, as it was possible by evidence to have supplied the defect and shown that, under the real circumstances of the case, the title of the defendant Jane White was properly to be affected by the facts, in proof of which the declarations were offered, we must assume that such evidence would have been produced. By particularizing the objection, the other party may have been, and must be presumed to have been, thrown off his guard, and the objecting party must stand upon the ground taken at the trial. This principle should always be applied when the defect is not so radical as to be incapable of being remedied. But if it should be conceded, for the sake of the argument, that what was sought to be proved by the plaintiff was a transaction between the plaintiff and the deceased, which showed or tended to show that the plaintiff was a mortgagee for value in good faith, I should still be of opinion that the evidence was competent. It is not, in my opinion, enough that the party against whom such evidence is offered, is in some sense an assignee of the person deceased, by being the owner of property derived by him mediately or immediately from the deceased person at some time more or less remote. If, for instance, the land conveyed to the defendant Jane White had come to her years before, by various transfers through many hands, but all transferring a title which at an earlier period had belonged to the party deceased, it would not, as it seems to me, constitute her assignee in the sense of this statute. The various phrases employed in the statute to express the relation to the deceased, which precludes testimony from the opposite party, as to personal transactions or communications with the deceased, indicate that the ruling idea is that of succession in interest to the deceased. It is against his executor, administrator, heir at law, next of kin, assignee, legatee, devisee or survivor, that evidence of his personal transactions and communications with the other *341 party cannot be proved by such party. The party standing in each of these relations, is considered as representing an interest which the deceased had, or is claimed to have had at the time of the transaction or communication sought to be proved, which interest was subsequently devolved on such party. When, therefore, the interest of such party is not in this sense derived from the deceased, but was vested in the party by title superior to and exclusive of the deceased person at the time of the transaction proposed to be proved, he ought not to be regarded as occupying either of the relations which the statute protects, although in some literal sense he may stand in such relation. The mere fact that he is executor or heir at law, if he does not claim as such, will not bring him within the protection of the statute. To be entitled to that, he must be a party as executor, or heir, or in some other of the specified relations. In this case Jane White had a perfect title against her husband at the time of the transaction sought to be proved. She had omitted to record her title deeds, and, therefore, a bona fide mortgage by her husband as a former owner, would, if recorded, be by force of the recording statutes a lien superior to her title. But this does not place her in the position of being the holder of such a derivative right as is protected by the statute.
The exclusion of this testimony was an error for which a new trial was properly granted. The order must, therefore, be affirmed, and judgment absolute must be rendered against the appellant.
GROVER, J., concurs; FOLGER and ANDREWS, JJ., concur in result; CHURCH, Ch. J., and ALLEN, J., dissent; RAPALLO, J., not voting.
Order affirmed, and judgment accordingly. *342