10 Misc. 718 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1895
One of the objections to the enforcement of the lease under which the rent is claimed, and which is dated April 26, 1892, is that the attorneys and agents of the lessor, Messrs. Havens & Beebe, who assumed to execute the lease on his behalf, were not lawfully authorized thereunto by writing. 2 Rev. St. p. 135. The only written authority produced on the trial was a pow7er of attorney which, it was conceded, was not received from the plaintiff by his agents until several months after they had signed the lease, although it bore date June, 1889; but they testified that long prior to the execution of a lease they had written authority under seal to make it, although after search for such paper it could not be found, and they were allowed to give secondary evidence of its contents, which appeared to be similar to those of the written power which was produced. Both of them testified on this point, and they were not contradicted. It is argued, however, by appellant that the identity of contents and date between the lost paper and the writing produced on the trial shows that there was but one instrument, and that it was the one produced; and, the evidence being that it was in possession of the principal at the time of the execution of the lease by Havens & Beebe, the inference was that it had been revoked. The evidence does not establish that the lost paper (or papers, for the testimony showed that there were two different powers of attorney originally executed) was identical with the writing produced, but, rather, that the latter was a later instrument, antedated to agree in time with the original power. The point which appellant urged most strongly on the trial was that the plaintiff, having offered the writing as an authority for the execution of the lease, could not recede from that position and offer proof of any previously executed paper; but that contention was manifestly untenable. As the testimony of Messrs. Havens & Beebe, concerning