29 N.Y.S. 169 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
The referee to whom the questions relating to a disputed claim of the plaintiff against the estate represented by the defendant were referred out of surrogate’s court found as facts that plaintiff, previous to the time of entering the employment of defendant’s intestate, was receiving a salary of $10 a week; that she offered to pay him the same sum if he would enter her service; that he accepted the offer, and performed the services requested from July 4,1886, to the time of her death, November 19,1890, making the amount of salary earned by him $1,590; that she paid -him on account $.10 a month during such period, aggregating $530; that, in addition, the estate should be credited with $450.90, which a decree of surrogate’s court had found to be due the defendant from this plaintiff; and, as a conclusion of law, that plaintiff should recover the agreed sum, less offsets, with interest, amounting to $688.57. In passing, it may be said that the finding of the referee to the effect that plaintiff is indebted to the defendant in the sum of $450.90, adjudged by the decree of the surrogate, was in reality founded upon a decree made in a discovery proceeding instituted by the administrator against Peter Walsh (this plaintiff), in which it was adjudged that Walsh, after the death of defendant’s intestate, unlawfully took and carried away from the premises in which she died the sum of $450.90. It further appeared upon this trial that after her death he overhauled her receipts and papers, and burned a few of them, which turn out to have been receipts given by him to her for moneys paid him from time to time. This ¿fact is testified to by two witnesses, who were present at the time when he selected these receipts from among a great number for burning. It is true that he undertakes to deny it, but his efforts in that direction are accompanied by admissions that these parties were with him on the occasion to which they testify, and that he did then burn some papers, which he describes as old newspapers and scraps. The appellant contends that, in view of plaintiff’s conduct in unlocking the receptacle in which the intestate kept her valuables, taking from it bank books, money, deeds, and other useful papers, and his misconduct in destroying the receipts given by him to Mrs. Duffy, thus depriving the defendant of the opportunity to use them in this action, considered in connection with the testimony of several witnesses to the effect that they had overheard conversations between plaintiff and defendant’s intestate in which it was asserted by Mrs. Duffy, and not denied by plaintiff, that his compensation was ten dollars a month, "with his board, washing, and mending added, and that such conversations had resulted at different tines in the payment by her of small sums of money to him, accompanied by a demand on her part and acquiescence on his that he give a receipt for a month’s salary at the rate of $10
‘‘Q. On page G5, Mrs. ICiernan testifies that in August, 1887, she heard a conversation between you and Mrs. Duffy, it being- the first conversation that she heard between you, in which you stated you wanted money, and Mrs. Duffy said you were getting $10 a month, and that you were not. worth half that. Did that conversation ever take place? (Same objection, same ruling, and exception.) A. No. Q. On the same page Mrs. ICiernan testifies that in January, 1888, she was present at an interview when you asked Mrs. Duffy for money, and she refused to give it, saying that she had already given you*172 over and above your wages; and, on the following page, that Mrs. Duffy stated’ that your wages were ten dollars a month. Did that interview ever take-place? (Same objection, same ruling, and exception.) A. No. Q. On page-73, Nellie Duffy testifies that she recollected an occasion when a controversy took place between Mrs. Duffy and yourself as to whether Mrs. Duffy owed: you any money. Did that interview ever take place? (Same objection, same-ruling, and exception.) A. No.”
It will be observed that plaintiff was permitted to deny that the alleged conversations between himself and the deceased ever took, place. The courts have declared the policy of the statute to be to exclude an interested witness from testifying—First, to any transaction between himself and the deceased, or in which the witness-in any manner participated; and, second, to all communications-between the deceased and the witness, including communications in - the presence or hearing of the witness if he in any way was a party thereto, or communications to either one of two or more persons if all were interested. Holcomb v. Holcomb, 96 N. Y. 316. The rule is the same whether the object be to prove an affirmative or a negative. The interested party cannot testify that an alleged conversation or an interview concerning the agreement or transaction did' not take place, any more than he can testify concerning the conversation. Our attention is called to certain cases which it is contended justify the rulings of the referee, and which it is insisted?" considerably relax the rigor of the more early decisions, which undertook to apply and enforce the statute. In Pinney v. Orth, 88 N. Y. 447-451, a party to the action was permitted to testify that a-witness who had detailed a conversation which he alleged took place-between the interested party and the deceased at a place named’ was never present at the place specified when any such conversations took place. The court held that it was proper for him to so testify; that the statute did not preclude the survivor from testifying to extraneous facts or circumstances tending to show that a-witness who had testified affirmatively to such a transaction or communication had testified falsely. By way of illustration, the court said that it would have been entirely proper, for instance, for the-survivor to have testified that he was at some other place than the city of New York where and when the conversation was alleged to have taken place. But, said the court, “the language of the prohibition is sufficiently broad to prohibit the survivor from testifying; that any particular communication or transaction did or did not take place personally between himself and the deceased.” It should" be remarked in this connection that the questions put to and responses made by the plaintiff amounted to a denial of certain communications alleged to have taken place between him and Mrs,. Duffy. Such was their intended purpose and effect. Had defendant’s witnesses been called upon to fix the time and place of the-conversations related by them, and then plaintiff, in rebuttal, had. been asked whether he was present at the times and places mentioned, and he had answered that he was not, his testimony would, have been within the protection of Pinney v. Orth, supra. Lewis v. Merritt, 98 N. Y. 206, was based on Pinney v. Orth. The plaintiff;,"