Walsh & Mallory v. Ostrander

22 Wend. 178 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1839

By the Court,

Cowen, J.

The question whether the balance claimed by the plaintiff below had been extinguished by an application of it to the payment of the debt due from him and Gould jointly, was left to the jury under the proper qualifications, and they have found that it was not. There was nothing in evidence on that question to conclude the judge or jury, and the only point calling for consideration, grows out of the objection that the previous suit and proceedings in the New-York common pleas were inadmissible. As to the competency of these, the familiar ground is taken, that to be evidence in one cause, a verdict or judgment in another must have been between the same parties, as well as in respect to the same matter. The propositen is perfectly correct, but has no application to the proceedings in the common pleas, when taken in connection with the purpose for which they were offered as evidence. The proposition is confined to cases where the record in another suit is offered to prove that the question in the pending cause was decided in the other, and to infer that, as it is a thing which has before been passed upon in judgment, it therefore cannot be again examined. When used for other objects, as in deraigning a title, or to show a confession, or an act done, the reason of the rule ceases. A mere stranger to a verdict and judgment, for instando, who claims land in virtue of a purchase upon execution, may give the record in evidence. A plea of guilty to an indictment for an assault and battery may be received as evidence against the defendant in a civil action at the suit of the prosecutor; an *181answer in chancery in one suit is admissible in another between different parties. They are both receivable, like any other confession of the fact; and, by a very plain parity of reasoning, when the defendants in the case at bar sued in the common pleas and recovered their whole demand against Gould and Ostbander, without crediting the debt in suit by Ostrander alone, it is an admission that all their allegations about its having been before applied, are a mere pretence. If it had been before applied, they, as honest men, should have seen that credit was properly given on the former trial. It is treating them favorably, at least, to say that they then fairly withheld the credit. Their conduct in that suit, and upon that trial, thus being pertinent, was receivable as a part of the res gesta. These views are sustainable by quite a number of cases, which I have examined. I will refer to one or two of them. See De Forest v. Strong, 8 Conn. R. 513; argument of Bissell, J., id. 521. See also Wells v. Shipp, Walker’s R. 353, in which Nicholson, J. said: “Although these records are not directly between the plaintiff and defendant, yet they were a part of the res gesta, out of which the present action had grown. They were circumstances from which the jury might properly deduce facts; and the court very properly permitted them to go to the jury.”

There cannot be a doubt that oral evidence was admissible to show what in fact passed on the trial; and the act of the attorney in withholding the credit was, in legal effect, the act of his principals. Indeed, the plaintiffs in error have, to this day, holden on to the verdict obtained there, which they wish us now to decide was obtained without their authority. Nothing of reducing that verdict by a credit has been heard in the course of this cause, till it came to argument on the writ of error before us. To reverse this judgment would be to say they may recover the same money twice.

It is singular that we should have a serious objection now raised, that the goods due for the note were not demanded before the plaintiffs in error were sued. They had declared their intention to withhold payment, both in goods and in *182money, and insisted on applying the money to the joint debt of Ostrander and Gould; and this, after they had got the money of Platt. They have gone on to litigate this suit, on the ground that they had a right so to apply it. For the law to say that this was a case for demand, either of goods or money, would be to exact a most idle and extravagant act of courtesy.

The chief justice was clearly right in saying that the contract was with Ostrander alone. It was, therefore, not a case in which the plaintiffs in error could claim to apply or set it off against a demand due from him and another, without an express or implied agreement of the parties so to apply it. That there was any such agreement, the jury have denied by their verdict.

Judgment affirmed.