26 F. Cas. 1186 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1832
As to the first objection, the counsel seems to be under a misapprehension with respect to the counts. There is a count upon an insimul computassent and the settlement and statement of the balance
But a verdict having been given for the defendant, all this is immaterial if the court erred in admitting the letter from Peter Hagner to the defendant, of the 20th of September, 1816. By the 11th section of the act of 1817 [3 Stat. 368], the transcripts are to be certified by the auditors instead of the register; and the officers of accountant and additional accountant are abolished, and the appointment of auditors authorized, and the duties of accountants transferred to them. By the act 29th April, 1816 [3 Stat. 222], an additional aecouhtant of the war department is required to be appointed, whose duty it shall be to adjust and settle all the accounts in that department existing at the conclusion of the late war and then unsettled. This act was limited to one year and the end of the next session of congress thereafter. The authority given to the assistant-accountant, under this act, is special, and it might be a sufficient answer to the admissibility of the letter of Hagner. that it did not appear to relate to accounts coming within the act. Its being addressed to Hugh R. Martin, late captain 13th infantry, may afford reasonable belief that such was the fact, if the letter was at all admissible; but it should appear clearly that it related to matters within the scope of his authority; and besides, the transcripts introduced in evidence show, that upon the settlement of the 19th September, 1816, a credit was claimed for enlisting twelve recruits which was at the time suspended,’ but afterwards admitted; and a further credit of thirty dollars is allowed him for advances made to a surgeon for medical services. These credits must have béen allowed in consequence of claims set up by Martin, and show that the settlement referred to in Hagner’s letter could not have been understood as closing all accounts. These, however, may be considered objections going to the weight of evidence, but not to its competency; but I think the evidence altogether inadmissible, and should have been rejected by the court. This letter bears date after the settlement of the account; and it would be a very dangerous principle to adopt, that the United States are bound by the declarations or confessions of their agents, made after the transaction was done. In the case of Lee v. Monroe, 7 Cranch [11 U. S.] 368, the question came under the consideration of the court, “How far the United States were bound by the declarations and representations made by their agents;” and the court seems to make a distinction between agents of the public and of private persons, and lays down the rule that the principal is not bound unless it most manifestly appears that the agent was acting within the scope of his authority, and was empowered, in his capacity as agent, to make the declaration or representation which is relied on as the ground of relief. But I apprehend this letter would not have been admissible even if Hagner be considered as standing on the same footing as the agent of a private person. Hagner himself would have been a competent witness, and should have been examined, and might have expláined the incongruity between his letter and the subsequent statement of the account made by himself. 2 Caine, 106. In the ease of Leeds v. Marine Ins. Co., 2 Wheat. [15 U. S.] 383. this general rule is laid down, that the answer .in chancery, of an agent is not evidence against his principal, nor are his admissions in pais unless when, they are a part of the res gestae.
The judgment of the court below must be reversed without costs, and a venire facias de novo awarded, returnable in this court.
We are, in the first place, after fixing upon him the character of an agent, to inquire whether his acts, statements or declarations proposed to be given in evidence, took place while he was making the agreement or otherwise proceeding within the scope or bounds of the authority which we find he possessed. If this be so, they are the acts, statements or declarations of the principal himself; and though the party insisting upon them as such, may call the agent and prove them by him, yet he may be passed by, and any third person having the requisite knowledge of such acts, statements or declarations, is equally admissible, for that purpose. Rawson v. Adams, 17 Johns. 130, 131; Sherman v. Crosby, 11 Johns. 70, 71; Shelhamer v. Thomas, 7 Serg. & R. 109; Meredith v. Kennedy, Litt. Sel. Cas. 516-518; Hood v. Reeve, 3 Car. & P. 532; per Spencer, J., in Coleman v. Southwick, 9 Johns. 54 55; per Marcy, J., in Benjamin v. Smith, 4 Wend. 334; Thallhimer v. Brinckerhoff, 4 Wend. 396,