97 N.Y.S. 805 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
This' is an action for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered. The answer is a general denial. Before this action was commenced the plaintiffs recovered judgment for the value of the game goods against the. husband of this defendant. He was examined in supplementary proceedings, and upon evident failure to collect the judgment this'action was commenced. ITpon the supplementary
Under the circumstances disclosed, I am of opinion that the exclusion of the testimony of the defendant’s husband was error, and that if it contained what was claimed for it, a question of fact would have been presented for the jury’s consideration at, to defendant’s proprietorship of the business, for whose benefit plaintiffs delivered the merchandise.
• The general rule as to the reception of vicarious admissions is that where a third person’s statement is made in the presence of a party, the latter’s silence implies assent to the correctness of the ■ communication, where the statement is made under such circumstances by such persons and is of such a character as naturally to call for a reply, if he did not intend to admit it; or, in other words, silence is not evidence of admission unless there are circumstances that render it more reasonably probable that' á man would answer the charge made against him than that he would not.
The present case, however, is not'within the exception, and the reasoning which commends this exception, does not-obtain here, The defendant heard the statements of her husband;1 she was in' company'With him at the officd of the referee in supplementary . proceedings; no'lawyer represented her or him, and they Were both examined by the attorney for the judgment creditors. She had heard the statements that she was the principal and her husband the agent, and it is probable that had the proceeding gone no further her silence wouhl not have rendered competent her husband’s statements, for she would not have been permitted with propriety to interrupt the orderly examination of her' husband "as a witness.. The feature of the case, however, was that she was herself called as • a witness, and then had every opportunity to deny or to disavow the statements of her husband, and it would not only not have been . improper for her to have done so, but it would have conformed strictly with the proprieties of the occasion and her own interest, had such been the' case, for her to have stated her lack of assent to , his language. Where one does not offer his own testimony in civil cases to contradict the.facts established by the evidence against.him' it is proper to draw the inference that he could not truthfully deny
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
Lead Opinion
The evidence of the husban'd given in supplementary proceed? ings was offered by the plaintiff on the theory that it was an admission by this defendant, for the reason that she(did not contradict it. when she heard her husband give it before the referee. The rule of admission by- silence of the truth of statements made in one’s presence extends only to cases where the court can say that the natural and reasonable inference from silencé is admission, and for that reason it does, not extend to evidence given in judicial proceedings.- It is not to be expected that one will gel up and contradict a witness on the stand, or that he will do more than answer questions if. he be subsequently called as a. witness himself (1 Greenl. Ev.-§ 197, and notes). That the tribunal is not a high or imposing one does not make a difference. The same orderly course of procedure belongs there. I suppose, also, that coverture may stand in the way of the- rule applying, for it would hardly be natural and reasonable for a wife to get up in court and brand her husband as a perjurer. Indeed', if she even chides him on getting home it.will only be out of the same love and affection which made her naturally and reasonably keep still in court. Every Woman is not a Jeanie Deans. •
The judgment should be affirmed.
Jenks, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred; Hooker, J., read for reversal. ~ ■