1 Daly 380 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1860
By the Court.
The defendants were in possession of the premises mentioned in the complaint as the tenants of the plaintiff, down to the 1st of May, 1854. Pri or to that day the plaintiff agreed by paroi to give the defendants a lease for ten years from the 1st of May, 1854, for the same premises atibe rental of $275 per annum, payable quarterly, on the usual quarter days. The defendants continued in possession of the premises after the 1st of May, 1854,.and until the 31st of October following, when they quit them.' They paid the quarter’s rent due on the 1st of August", 1854, at the rate of $275 per annum. The plaintiff refused to give the defendants the lease
In all these cases, however, the defendant occupied for a year, or admitted that. he. was to account to..the plaintiff as his
On the cross-examination of the witness McPherson, the plaintiff’s counsel asked him if he had not been expelled from an Odd Fellows Lodge. The question was objected to and overruled. The plaintiff’s counsel excepted. The question was properly excluded. The answer if in the affirmative could in no way tend to prove any issue in the cause, or affect the credibility of the witness. The fact was one,too, in the nature of a conviction, being an expulsion from some organization, it must be assumed having the power to expel. It might be for non-payment of dues, but could scarcely be for any cause which by the law would establish moral turpitude; but if it would, then it was objectionable as a particular fact upon which a witness cannot be impeached. The -plaintiff’s counsel then offered to show that the witness had been convicted and imprisoned for gross intoxication in the City of New York on the 13th of August, 1855.
This was objected to, and properly excluded. It was an effort to impeach a witness by proof of a particular offence. 1 Greenleaf, § 461; Varona v. Socarris, 8 Abbott Pr. R., 302.
The plaintiff called a witness named Baptist, wdio stated on his cross-examination, “ I went or stayed in, to hear what was said. Mr. Greaton had told me to hear everything that was said about letting the shop.” On the resumption of the direct examination, the plaintiff’s counsel asked the witness to “ state all Mr. Greaton said to him with reference to the hiring of the premises, when he told him to be a witness of what occurred as he had stated.” To this the defendants’ counsel objected, and the Court decided that the answer must be limited to what the plaintiff told him about being a witness, and the whole conversation could not be given. The plaintiff excepted. The witness then stated all that Mr. Greaton had said to him about being a witness. The exception just stated was not well taken. On the cross-examination all that the witness said about the conversation was that Mr. Greaton told him to hear every thing that was said about letting the shop ; and it is fair to assume, that the question which extracted the-answer, related to that subject only. The plaintiff was not entitled to have,
The judgment should be affirmed.