78 A.D. 510 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action was brought to recover a balance alleged to be due upon a certain promissory note. The answer alleged payment and pleaded the Statute of Limitations. After hearing the evidence the learned trial justice dismissed the complaint upon the ground that the Statute of Limitations had run against the note. The plaintiff appeals.
It is practically admitted by the respondent that the learned court erred in not admitting in evidence certain indorsements made upon the note, and which were alleged to have been placed there in 1897,. while the note was not open to the defense of the Statute of Limitar tions, but it is urged that the evidence, if admitted, would not necessarily have been controlling, and that the error should be disregarded here. • It was said in Mills v. Davis (113 N. Y. 243, 248) that in such a case it was for the jury to say whether the payment was, in fact, made, and that they may inquire, among other things, “ whether, upon the whole, the interest of the creditor may not be promoted rather than impaired by giving effect to the indorsement, and, if so, reject it altogether.” But it seems to us that these things: must be determined by the court or jury upon the evidence after it has been admitted, and as the learned court excluded this evidence, it must be assumed that in arriving at his conclusion that the Statute of Limitations was a bar, he did it without any reference to the evidence which had been excluded. We cannot say what would have been the conclusion reached if the evidence offered had been regarded as competent, and the plaintiff is entitled to a decision upon his case in the light of all of the evidence which may be brought to bear upon the issues presented by the pleadings. The rule is well established that “ The reception of illegal evidence is presumptively injurious to the party objecting to its admission, but where the presumption is repelled and it clearly appears, on examination of the whole record, beyond the possibility of rational doubt, that the result would have been the same if the objectionable proof had been rejected, the error furnishes no ground for reversal.” (People v. Gonzalez, 35 N. Y. 49, 59. See, also, McGean v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 117 id. 219, 224, and authorities there cited; Desbecker v. McFarline, 42 App. Div. 455, 460; affd. on opinion below, 166 N. Y. 625.) But the converse of this proposition is not necessarily true,
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Hirschberg and Jenks, JJ., ■concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.