22 Barb. 647 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
There is nothing in the objection that the referee erred in receiving the note in evidence without further explanation of the erasure. That erasure was certainly not to the prejudice of the defendants, as its effect was to relieve them from the payment of interest for six months and until after the note became due. The note was drawn, at first, on interest from its date, but on the attention of the plaintiff being called to the fact that it was for the purchase of goods not on interest, and on its being insisted by one of the defendants that it ought not to draw interest until it was due, the plaintiff assented, and said that was right, and the words “ with use” were then probably stricken out for the benefit of the defendants, and, as the witness thought, before the note was signed. The explanation was full and satisfactory, and the referee so correctly found as a question of fact.
The more serious objection, in my opinion, is, that the referee erred in refusing to receive the evidence of set-off, on the part of Salmons. It is contended, on the part of the plaintiff, that the statute (2 R. 8. 154, § 12, sub. 6) requires that the set-off shall be a demand in favor of all the defendants in the action, and due to them jointly, and so, undoubtedly, is that statute. But it has been insisted, and decided, that under sections 149, 150,136 and 274 of the code of 1852, this statute is so far modified as to admit of a set-off or counter-claim on behalf of one or more of several defendants, where a several judgment may be had in the action between the plaintiff and any one or more of the defendants, as upon a joint and several promissory
It is said there were no exceptions properly taken to the report, as to the decision of the referee on questions of law. For aught that appears in the case, it seems to have been regularly settled and the exceptions taken in the manner now required in reviewing the report of the referee. And I think we must so intend, for the purposes of this argument.
The defendants were offered as witnesses for each other, and
The other offer, to prove payment by each of the defendants on behalf of the other, was, I think, properly overruled. The testimony must necessarily have gone for the benefit of the witness, as well as of his co-defendant; as proof of payment would of course have discharged all right of action upon the note.
But, for the reasons stated, the judgment must be reversed, and a new trial ordered; costs to abide the event.
C. h. Allen, Paige, James and Rosekrans, Justices.]