192 A.D. 143 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff was a storekeeper dealing in groceries and meats. The defendant was the proprietor of a boarding house. During the summer of the year 1918 the plaintiff at various times sold the defendant supplies from his store. The defendant failed to make payment in full and the plaintiff brought this action to recover the balance due. In order to prove his claim the plaintiff introduced his books of account in evidence. These consisted of day books and ledgers, the entries in which were regularly made from sales slips upon which it was the practice of the plaintiff and his clerks to note sales and deliveries as made. The plaintiff kept three clerks, all of whom made entries in the day books and ledgers. Proof was given by customers of the plaintiff that they had settled with bim on the basis of his books and had found them to be correct. Goods sold to the defendant were delivered at the store of the plaintiff or at the residence of the defendant, but deliveries of only a portion of the goods sold were shown. The plaintiff recovered a judgment from which the defendant appeals,
Two of the clerks employed by the plaintiff were not produced upon the trial. Proof was, therefore, lacking that these clerks made correct entries of sales; that they at the time had knowledge of the sales and deliveries made; that they no longer remembered the transactions recorded. Consequently, entries made by them were not receivable as they otherwise would have been as memoranda of past recollection. (Merrill v. Ithaca & Owego R. R. Co., 16 Wend. 586; Cole v. Jessup, 10 N. Y. 96; Halsey v. Sinsebaugh, 15 id. 485; Guy v. Mead, 22 id. 462; Marcly v. Shults, 29 id. 346; Gilbert v. Sage, 57 id. 639; Flood v. Mitchell, 68 id. 507.) No proof was given that the clerks who made the sales correctly reported them to the clerks who made the entries, and that the entries were then correctly made in the regular course of business. Therefore, none of the entries made by any of the clerks fell within the memoranda rule as extended by the later cases to cover facts reported but unknown to the entrants. (Mayor, etc., v. Second Ave. R. R. Co., 102 N. Y. 572; Clark v. Nat. Shoe & Leather Bank, 164 id. 498; Krom v. Levy, 1 Hun, 171; Payne v. Hodge, 7 id. 612; Shear v. Van Dyke, 10 id. 528; Powell v. Murphy, 18 App. Div. 25.) The two clerks who were not produced were not dead nor without the jurisdiction, so that the entries made by them did not fall within the rule relating to regular entries. (Holliday v. Martinet, 20 Johns. 168; Nichols v. Goldsmith, 7 Wend. 160; Sheldon v. Benham, 4 Hill, 129; Livingston v. Arnoux, 56 N. Y. 507; Ocean Nat. Bank of N. Y. City v. Carll, 55 id. 440.) The plaintiff having proved by several customers that they had made settlements with him upon the basis of his books and had found them to be correct, that the books produced were his books of account, that some of the articles charged for were delivered, asserts that the books were receivable, under the rule enunciated in the case of Vosburgh v. Thayer (12 Johns. 461), as the shop books of a party.
The shop-book exception to the hearsay rule owed its origin to a necessity created by the unavailability pf a party as a witness. (Wig. Ev. § 1536.) At the time of its introduction a party was not only disqualified from testifying in his own
The judgment and order should be reversed, with costs.
All concur, except Kiley, J., dissenting with a memorandum, in which John M. Kellogg, P. J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
I am satisfied within the meaning of the shop-book rule that the plaintiff kept no clerk, and the books were, therefore, properly received. If this is not so we should hold under the liberal practice required under section 1317 of the Code of Civil Procedure that the error, in view of the purchase slips and weekly slips delivered to the defendant, was a technical one only, and did not affect the substantial rights of the parties. I, therefore, dissent.
John M. Kellogg, P. J., concurs.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.