14 Johns. 79 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1817
delivered the opinion of the court. This is an action against the master of a sloop for so negligently managing her, that she ran foul of, and damaged the plaintiffs’ sloop. On the trial, Isaac Case, one of the owners of the sloop, of which
This court, in Van Nuys v. Terhune, (3 Johns. Cases, 82.,) on a careful examination of all the authorities, ancient and modern, laid down, with precision and accuracy, this general rule, “ that if a witness will not gain or lose by the event of the cause, or if the verdict cannot be given in evidence for or against him in another suit, the objection goes to his credit only, and not to his competency.’’ It was admitted by the court, that there might be some technical exceptions to the rule, but it was declared to be correct in its general application.
The witness, in this case, could not gain or lose, immediately, by the event of the cause; and the inquiry, therefore, will be, whether the verdict for or against the master of the vessel, who is to be considered a servant of the witness, could be given in evidence for or against him, in a suit to be brought for the same cause of action.
It is a general, if not universal, principle, that a suit between two persons shall not bind or affect a third person, who could not be admitted to make a defence, to examine witnesses, or to appeal from the judgment.. (Phillip’s Ev. 222.) A verdict or judgment in one action, upon the same matter, directly in question, is evidence for or against privies in blood, privies in estate, such as the feoffee or lessee, and privies in law, as the lord by escheat, tenant by curtesy, tenant in dower, and others who come in by act of law, in the post. The witness was neither privy in estate or law.
The case which bears most strongly in favour of the admissibility of the witness is that of Kinnersley v. Orpe, (Doug. 499.;) it was an action of debt for a penalty given by statute, for killing fish in the plaintiff’s fishery. The defendant was Doctor Cotton’s servant; the master claimed a right to the fishery, and a former action had been brought against another servant of Doctor Cotton, to try the right to the fishery, and in that action a verdict had been found for the plaintiff, and the trespass had been repeated by Doctor Cotton’s express orders. The plaintiff pro
The witness, as part owner of the vessel ofwhich the defendant was master, is undoubtedly responsible for his acts of commission or omission; but he is responsible on the sole ground that the defendant was his servant, and was, at the time, in the performance of his duty as servant; and it is very certain that the verdict against the defendant could not be given in evidence against the witness as master and owner, either to establish the fact of negligence, or the quantum, of damages. The case already cited of Green v. The New River Company, is an authority for both these propositions : for though, in that case.
There is another principle applicable to this case: if the acquittal of the servant might be given in evidence in a subsequent suit against the master, xvhich I am clearly of opinion it could not, that acquittal being procured by the evidence of the master, that, of itself, would exclude the giving the verdict in evidence. This principle was laid doxvn and adopted by the court of C. B. in Nix v. Cutting, (4 Taunt. Rep. 18.) In any view, therefore, the witness ought to have been admitted; the relation in which he stood affecting his credit, not his competency.
Judgment reversed.
Term Rep. 301. Johns, jotJ^Rcp sib. 49L°,m Rep'