69 N.Y. 430 | NY | 1877
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *432 Whether the contract of indemnity was by deed or by simple contract is not material. It was broken by the eviction of the plaintiff some two years before the trial, and the six years' limitation prescribed by statute for the bringing of actions upon promises had not therefore run. The statute commenced to run from the time of the eviction; but the objection was not taken at the trial, that the instrument was not under seal; had it been taken, the attention of the witnesses would have been called to it, and the fact more distinctly proved than it was, although from the evidence it was, without doubt, a sealed instrument. The execution and delivery of the assignment, containing the covenant of warranty, its loss and contents, were sufficiently proved. The referee, upon the evidence, was warranted in holding these facts well proved. The execution of the paper, its delivery, and the substance of it were proved by the subscribing witness, whose testimony as to the contents was corroborated by Mr. Gifford and others. The loss of the paper was proved by the several witnesses called to that fact. The statement of the contents of the assignment, in the record of judgment, in Dennison v.Haywood, was, without objection, adopted by and made a part of the evidence of Mr. Gifford, and that part of the record was properly in evidence as a part of his testimony, and as his version of the written agreement. It was not objected that the witness had not stated sufficient to entitle the reading of this part of the record as a statement by him, or that he should, from recollection, state the contents of the instrument. The record was not admitted as of itself evidence of the assignment, but merely as the statement of the witness of such contents.
Whether the present defendants had notice of the action against Haywood, and defended it, is not material. Without notice the record was prima facie evidence against them, and it was for them to show that there was a defence to the action, and that their title to the premises had not become forfeited. The judgment would not in the absence of notice, have concluded them, but was evidence against them. *434
(Bridegport F. M. Ins. Co. v. Wilson,
The judgment must be affirmed.
All concur, CHURCH, Ch. J., and EARL, J., concurring in result; ANDREWS, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed. *435