55 Pa. Super. 488 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1913
Opinion by
The learned auditing judge refused to allow the appellant’s claim of $510.30 for the funeral expenses of Charles E. Daly and Thomas H. Daly, brothers of James A. Daly, the decedent. The appellant filed several exceptions to the adjudication which, after argument, the court dismissed and confirmed the adjudication. This ruling was based largely on the fact found by the auditing judge that the appellant had charged the funeral expenses of Charles E. Daly and Thomas H. Daly to Catherine N. Daly, their mother, and at a later date appellant’s bookkeeper had written the name of James A. Daly in each account on a line above that on which the original debtor was named. It was claimed that this was done pursuant to a letter written by James A. Daly to the appellant assuming liability for said accounts. This letter was lost and was not produced at the hearing. After sufficient proof that there was such a letter, and that it had been lost, and that a diligent search failed to discover it, appellant’s counsel offered to prove its contents by appellant’s bookkeeper
The ground upon which the court sustained this ruling was that if there was such a letter written by James A. Daly after appellant’s claim had been charged to Catherine N. Daly, the promise alleged to have been made in the letter to pay the appellant’s claim would be without consideration, a nudum pactum. On the facts before us this conclusion cannot be sustained. We do not know the contents of the letter and it is easy to imagine that it may have contained sufficient to render the writer thereof liable to the appellant for the funeral expenses above referred to.
The witness qualified herself by testifying that she knew the handwriting of James A. Daly and that she received the letter and had it in her possession and that it came from him and that it was lost and could not be found after diligent search. The law is well settled that upon such proof the contents of a lost writing may be proved by parol: Richardson v. Morris, 26 Pa. Superior Ct. 192; Hemphill v. McClimans, 24 Pa. 367; Diehl v. Emig et al., 65 Pa. 320; Gorgas, Admr., v. Hertz, 150 Pa. 538. It is also well decided that a witness who has read the lost writing, or otherwise has actual knowledge of it, and is able to testify giving his best recollection of its contents, is competent even though he cannot state the precise language of the writing: Emig et al. v. Diehl and Wife, 76 Pa. 359; Gould v. Lee, 55 Pa. 99; Cote v. Schoen, 1 Pa. Superior Ct. 583. As to the necessity of proof that the letter was lost; that due diligence had been used to find it and of the inability to produce it, to lay grounds for the proof of its contents by parol, the following cases are cited: Strause v. Braunreuter, 14 Pa. Superior Ct. 125; Stern v. Stanton, 184 Pa. 468; Irwin et al. v. Irwin et al., 34 Pa. 525.
An examination of the notes of testimony forces us to the conclusion that the learned auditing judge was
In our opinion it was the duty of the auditing judge to have instructed this witness clearly to give her best recollection of the wording of the letter. The authorities we have cited, and many others, fully sustain the proposition that a witness testifying to the contents of a lost or destroyed writing is not rendered incompetent by inability to repeat the precise wording of the writing. Indeed, no witness can be expected to repeat the full and precise language of a lost writing unless the witness had memorized the same, and this would be an unusual thing for any business man or bookkeeper to do.
In the present case it would have been much better for the auditing judge to have instructed the witness and then permitted her to give her recollection of the contents of the letter, and then determine whether or not it was sufficient,to justify the appellant in charging his claim to James A. Daly. If this course had been pursued we would now have the witness’ testimony as to the contents of the letter before us and we could determine whether or not the estate of James A. Daly is
The first assignment of error is overruled because there is not sufficient evidence in the record to sustain it. For reasons already given we feel compelled to sustain the second and third assignments. No exception was taken to the ruling of the auditing judge as raised in the fourth assignment and it is not properly brought into the record: Cutter v. Pierson, 26 Pa. Superior Ct. 10; Com. v. Wilkinsburg Borough, 37 Pa. Superior Ct. 160. The fourth assignment is not sustained. The fifth assignment plainly violates Rule XIY of this court. It is an attempt to assign error to the action of the court upon all of the exceptions filed for the appellant to the adjudication of the auditing judge: Wright’s Est., 155 Pa. 64; Johnston’s Est. 222 Pa. 514. The fifth assignment is not sustained.
The second and third assignments are sustained and the decree is reversed with a procedendo.