39 N.J.L. 593 | N.J. | 1877
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This suit was, brought by the defendant in error, as administrator of Smock, against John E. Vanderveer, in Monmouth Common Pleas, to recover the amount of a certain promissory note, dated June 26th, 1875, given by the plaintiff in error, Vanderveer, by which he promised to pay to the defendant, as administrator, or his order, the sum of $602.60, with interest from June 1st, 1875; said note purporting on its face to be due the estate of defendant’s decedent, on settlement of notes and book accounts. The defendant below, beside the plea of non-assumpsit, set up by way of defence, that the promissory note in suit was the result of an account stated between himself and the plaintiff below as administrator, and that, in the settlement so made, through error and omission, certain claims which he, the defendant, had against the intestate in his lifetime, had not been credited to him, and that through such error and omissions, the balance for which the note was given was found. He also set up an agreement in writing made on the day of the date of said note, between himself and the plaintiff below, reciting the settlement and the giving of the promissory note for the balance found to be due on said settlement, whereby the parties agreed to rectify and allow any errors in said settlement through miscalculation or omission, if claim be made
When the Bowne check was offered in evidence by the plaintiff, the agreement made between the parties at the time of giving the promissory note in suit, was not in evidence. The offer of the defendant was to show that this check, with other checks and notes, was given to pay and satisfy certain claims against the decedent, at his request, and, by mistake, had been omitted in stating the account between the defendant and the administrator, and that, therefore, the note given was, to the extent of those payments, without consideration. As the ease then stood, this proof was entirety competent. The suit was between the original parties to the note, and, if the defendant could show that, in stating the.account which resulted in giving the promissory note, claims in his hands against the decedent were, by mistake, left out of that accounting, it was competent for him, under the general issue, to make proof of such mistake, and have it corrected. Trueman v. Hurst, 1 T. R. 40; Dails v. Lloyd, 12 Q. B. 531; Thomas v. Hawkes, 8 M. & W. 140; Wilson v. Wilson, 14 C. B. 616.
The statement of an account is not conclusive, but only presumptive evidence against the party admitting the balance to be against him. Chit. on Con. (11 th Am. ed.) 969. Fraud or mistake may be shown against it.
But this ruling of the court, if erroneous, was harmless to the defendant, in view of the further developements of the case, unless the court erred in its subsequent rejection of the testimony. After the introduction of the agreement by the defendant, the admissibility of proof of claims omitted, depended upon his ability to show that demand had been
There being no error found in the record, the judgment below must be affirmed, with costs.