15 Barb. 318 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1853
It is not ’necessary to rest the judgment in this case, upon the position that the plaintiff was entitled to enforce, by action, the promise of the defendant to Lee, as having been made for the plaintiff’s benefit. Upon the facts found at the circuit, it is clearly right on another ground. The plaintiff and Reading indorsed the note for the
The complaint is adapted to the foregoing view of the case. It contains a claim for moneys paid for the defendant, and sets forth the facts which were proved. Thus regarding the case, Lee and Reading were competent witnesses for the plaintiff. The action was not prosecuted for their immediate benefit, upon a just construction of the first clause of § 899 of the code. That clause, in my opinion, embraces only persons who are so connected with the action as to render them virtually parties to the litigation. (Evarts v. Palmer, 7 Barb. 180,181. Weston v. Hatch, 6 How. Prac. Rep. 443. Harding v. Hodgkinson, 4 Eng. L. & E. Rep. 462. Colombine v. Penhall, 13 Adol. & El. N. S. 129. 66 Eng. Com. L. R. 128. See cases referred to in arguments of counsel. Fitch v. Bates, 11 Barb. 471.) This construction has been given to it in several cases, in this district, not reported. The witnesses named did not stand in any such relation to this action. They were not parties to the claim or obligation sought to be. enforced, or entitled to any part of the moneys which might be recovered, and no rights of theirs were involved in the action. Whatever benefit could be derived by them from a recovery by the plaintiff and a satisfaction of the judgment, would not be produced in the action, but would be a consequence of it.
Reading was probably competent as a witness, at common law. (Farmers & Mechanics’ Bank v. Griffith, 5 Hill, 476.) So also was Lee, according to Gregory v. Dodge, (14 Wend. 593,) though not, I think, on principle.
The provision of § 398 of the code being general, without any restriction, must, I think, be held to extend to actions on contracts made before the code. It does not, applied to such contracts, impair their obligation; it has reference rather to the remedy upon them; and I am satisfied the-legislature had power to make it. It does not so affect the remedy that a substantial remedy is not possessed by parties; on the contrary, I think the provision a wise one, and calculated to promote the attainment of justice rather than to work injustice. The credit
Selden, Johnson and T. R. Strong, Justices.]
It was not material whether or not the answers of Lee to the interrogatories were in his handwriting; the requirement of the statute is that the commissioner “ shall cause the examination of each witness to be reduced to writing,” &c.; and I see no impropriety in procuring the witness to write his answers under the direction of the commissioner. The evidence offered on that subject was therefore properly rejected.
Judgment affirmed.