34 A.D. 392 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
Thp action is brought to recover upon what is called a bond of indemnity issued by the defendant, whereby the defendant agrees to indemnify the plaintiffs against “ loss to the extent of and not exceeding ten thousand dollars, resulting from, insolvency of debtors over and above an annual net loss of .$3,000, three
We think that this method of examining a witness was entirely improper: The effect, was to get before the jury the contents of a newspaper article, and, under the guise of a cross-éxamination-, to obtain from a witness a statement of his inability to deny the truth of that article when it was apparent that most of the facts stated in the article were not-within the knowledge of the witness and-could not, therefore, be either denied or admitted. Counsel, on cross-examination,. could have asked the witness whether certain facts
But, whatever may be said of the correctness of such cross-exami--. nation, the repetition of this method in conducting the direct examination of the witness Joseph, who was called by the defendant, was. clearly incompetent and improper. Joseph was called as a witness to prove the execution and delivery of a general release from the: plaintiffs to Bach. He testified that he had .prepared the release as-attorney for the plain tiffs,, was present at the time of its execution and witnessed its delivery to Bach. He does not appear to have-been an adverse witness, his only objection to answering appearing-to have been a proper care on his part.to avoid making any disclosure of any confidential relation between himself and his client, with a desire to obtain a direction from the court as to his duty in answering the questions asked him. On his direct examination he had testified that the plaintiffs had delivered to Bach a general release at the time of the transfer by Bach to the plaintiffs of' certain property, and after cross-examination, during which the state
There are several other questions which it is not necessary for us to determine upon this appeal as they may not be presented upon a new trial. The principal one was the competency of the testimony of Joseph as to the delivery of this general release, the objection to such testimony being that it involved the disclosure of a confidential communication between a client and his attorney. It is well for us to. state, however, that so far as the attorney was called upon simply to prove the execution and delivery of an - instrument by the plaintiffs, or the contents of that instrument, knowledge of which he had procured by reading it, and which was not acquired by any communication from the client to the attorney, he was not within the privilege provided for by section 835 of the Code; By that section it is provided that “ an attorney or counsellor at law shall not be allowed to disclose a communication made by his client to him, or his advice given thereon, in the course of his professional employment.” This privilege would clearly prevent the attorney from disclosing any . communication received by him from his client, or any knowledge that he acquired from his client while the relation between them continued. The fact, however, of the existence of an instrument in writing executed by the client, and the fact that such an instrument was actually delivered by the client to a third party, is not a communication made by the client to the attorney. It is an inde
■ There is. another question presented,, and that is whether a s-uf
The judgment is reversed, a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed-, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.