34 A.D. 260 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
There is only one question necessary to be considered upon this appeal, and that is the admission of certain letters over the objection of the plaintiff. The plaintiff was a son and only heir of the late Hester Hoag, and the action was brought on two promissory notes made by the said Hester Hoag to the order of the plaintiff. One of these notes was dated at Yonkers on the 13th of November, 1894, payable on demand, for $4,000, and the other bore date of Amawalk, October 15, 1890, and was payable on demand, for the sum of $2,000. The defense denied on information and belief that the said Hester Hoag made the notes in question, or that- she delivered them to the plaintiff, and alleged that if any such notes were made or delivered they wei’e without considez*ation, null and. void. Plaintiff introduced the notes in evidence and identified the two signatures as those of his mother, leaving the presumption of consideration and delivery where the law has placed it. (Laws of 1897, chap. 612, §§ 35, 50.)
The defendants did not undertake to produce direct evidence of a want of consideration for the notes, but they did put witnesses on the stand who swore, as experts, that the signatures to these two notes were forgeries. All of the evidence as to the want of considertion for the notes was of a circumstantial nature, based upon the transactions of a financial character between the mother and son, with some testimony as to the plaintiff’s conduct towards his mother*, including' the letter, the introduction of which appears to be fatal error. The letter of the plaintiff to his mother, with an unsigned answer on the back of it, was first introduced merely for the purpose of showing handwriting, but was afterward introduced and read in evidence, to which the plaintiff’s counsel duly objected, upon the grounds that it was irrelevant and immaterial. This objection seems well taken. Neither the letter of the plaintiff nor the reply has any relation to the questions at issue, and we are unable to'find any authorities, either among those cited or anywhere in the books, which justify the admission of this kind of evidence. The letter of the plaintiff addressed “ Mother,” recites that “ I have learned through Mrs. Williams that you and Aunt Mary contemplate coming here to live in one room as it were. I cannot consent for you to do that, for it will not be any credit to you or me socially or in a business sense to
“ It is often permissible,” say the court, in the case of Quincey v. White (63 N. Y. 370, 380), “ to prove facts and circumstances as a part of the history of the case, and to show the relation of the parties to the principal transaction; ” but it has never been held, so far as we have been able to discover, that an abstract letter, in no wise connected with the principal transaction, was admissible. “It is hardly necessary to inquire,” say the court in the case of Farmers & Manufacturers’ Bank v. Whinfield (24 Wend. 419, 426), “ whether,.supposing it to have been admissible, such a course was correct; for we think it impossible to uphold a verdict which may have resulted from allowing the jury to take with them as evidence a paper confessedly foreign to any of the matters in issue.” This was a case in which, in the course of a transaction resulting in a bond and mortgage, one Thomas Williams had, at the request of one Vassar, made a statement of his affairs.- On the cross-examination of Williams it was sought to impeach the fairness of this statement, and the court say: “Whether successfully or not, was, T think, entirely immaterial, for I have been unable to seetliat it had the remotest relevancy to the matter in hand.” The trial court interrupted the examination,- but permitted the case to go to the jury with the statement of Williams before them. “ The submission of the paper in that way to the jury,” say the court, “was,
“All evidence,” say the court, in the case of Thompson v. Bowie (4 Wall. 463, 471), “must have relevancy to the question in issue, and tend to prove it. If not a link in the chain of proof, it is not properly receivable. . * * * The general. character and habits of Bowie were not fit subjects of inquiry in this suit for any purpose. The rules of law do not require the plaintiff to be prepared with proofs to meet such evidence. That Bowie gambled at other times, when in liquor, was surely no legal proof that because he was in liquor on the 1st day of January, 1857, he gambled with Steer." It is very rare that in civil suits the character of the party is admissible in evidence, and it is never permitted unless the nature of the action involves or directly affects the general character of the party.” In this case Bowie sought to avoid payment of certain promissory notes on the statutory grounds that they were given for gambling debts; and it was sought to prove that when in liquor Bowie was given to gambling, and that he was drunk at the time these notes were given.
It is not contended in the case at bar that the introduction of. the plaintiff’s letter to his mother was specially harmful, but that it was irrelevant and immaterial, and that it was introduced for the purpose of getting before the jury the unsigned reply of the mother, equally
• In the case of United States v. Ross (92 U. S. 281) the court say: “ Because somebody’s cotton (how much or how little is not shown) arrived at Kingston from Eome at some time not known and was forwarded to Chattanooga before the 19th of August, 1864, it is inferred that the claimant’s thirty-one bales, presumed to have reached Chattanooga, thus arrived and were forwarded ; and, because forty-two hales were received at Chattanooga on that day from the quartermaster at Kingston, it is inferred that the claimant’s bales were among them. These seem to us to be nothing more than conjectures. They are not legitimate inferences, even to establish a fact; much less are they presumptions of law. They are inferences from inferences; presumptions resting on the basis of another presumption. Such a mode of arriving at a conclusion of fact is generally, if not-universally, inadmissible. Ho inference of fact or of law is reliable drawn from premises which are uncertain. Whenever circumstantial evidence is relied upon to prove a fact, the circumstances must be proved and not themselves presumed. Starkie on Evid., p. 80, lays down the rule thus: In the first place, as the very foundation of indirect evidence is the establishment of one or more facts from which the inference is sought to be made, the law requires that the latter should be established by direct evidence, as if they were the very facts in issue.’ It is upon this principle that courts are daily called upon to exclude evidence as too remote for the consideration of the jury. The law requires an open, visible connection between the principal and evidentiary facts and the deductions from them, and does not permit a decision to be made on remote inferences.” Ohamberlayne’s Best on Evidence (Am. Hotes,
It is clear, then, that under the - rules laid down by text writers, and sanctioned by the courts,, the admission of these letters .was' error; they did not relate, even remotely, to the issues involved in the action. The fact- that the mother and the plaintiff quarreled in 1890, two months after the-date of the first note and four years prior to the date of the second, could give the jury no possible light upon the question of whether these notes were given for a valid consideration, or whether they were forgeries; and these were the ■ issues- involved. ’“ It is a well-established principle,” say the court in the.case of People v. Corey (148 N. Y. 476, 489), “that illegal evidence which has a tendency to excite the passions, arouse the. prejudices, awaken the sympathies, or warp or influence the .judgment of jurors in any degree, cannot be considered as harmless ; ” and that rule is especially applicable to this case, Where the evidence could have no other possible effect. The question of a gift was not involved: The plaintiff stood upon the legal presumption that the notes, were given for a valuable consideration, and evidence that the mother was -not likely to give the plaintiff the notes was clearly irrelevant, because that question was not in issue..
“ It is' well settled in this State,” say the- court in the case of People v. Strait (154 N. Y. 165, 171), “ that a party is entitled- to the benefit of any competent evidence he may offer which bears upon a controverted question of fact embraced in the issuebut we have found no instance in which it has been held that the court was warranted in receiving incompetent evidence of a question- of fact not-in issue. Without expressing any- opinion as to the merits
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Sic.