8 Barb. 530 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1850
The deposition of a witness taken in a chancery suit between the same parties was received in evidence in this suit “ to prove a check,” already in part proved by another witness. No proof was offered that the witness was dead, absent, or kept out of the way by the defendant; and no exception was taken, that that must first be proved, but the defendant merely excepted to the reading of the deposition. On the argument it was not assumed that the witness-was not living ; we must assume that he was alive, and for aught that appears in this case, within this state.
In Powell v. Waters, (17 John. 179,) Spencer, Ch. J. says, that “ to entitle a party to give in evidence the testimony of a witness on a former trial, it must be shown that the witness is dead; and this was not shown or pretended.” In Wilbur v.
The case of Wilbur v. Selden, (6 Cowen, 162,) was directly to the point, and was one of the points essential to the decision of the cause. It established the rule that the mere absence of the witness from our state would not make his former testimony admissible.
Judge Cowen, in note 441 to Phillipps’ Evidence, admits this to be the rule in our state, although he regards it as too strict. He says that up to 1826 our courts admitted no excuse but death, and that in the last mentioned case the court, on full consideration and solemn argument, reasserted the principle. It is true, as he shows, and as Mr. Greenleaf in his work on Evidence also shows, (p. 193, &c.) some of the other states have adopted a different rule; yet some have gone so far as to create in us an apprehension that a relaxation of our rule might lead to dangerous results; and it may well be that in those states they were acting in analogy to some statute of their own. In matters of evidence it is important that our own decisions should control us, and that they should not be subject to variation according to the various decisions of other states.
It is said there was other testimony to prove the same fact;
Testimony was also received on the part of the plaintiff, of his own declarations made to Mr. Wright when repaying him $105, the amount of a loan made by Wright to the plaintiff. The action was for a slander of the plaintiff, uttered by the defendant : the defendant having stated that he had drawn a check to pay Wright about $103; a customer came in and he threw the check into the desk and went out, leaving the plaintiff there alone, and when he returned the check was gone. And afterwards, when his bank account was settled, that check was returned charged to him. Mr. Wright proved that the plaintiff borrowed of him $105 on 2d May, 1840, and on the 14th of that month repaid it to him in a check of the plaintiff for $100 with $5 in cash. Wright intimated by his -manner
There should be a new trial; the costs to abide the event.