12 N.H. 510 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1842
It may be convenient, in order to determine the validity of the exception taken to the admission of the book of accounts, to ascertain, as far as it may be done, the reason why in this country the account books of a party to the suit have been admitted as evidence of his claim against his opponent. The reason cannot be, that they are, in general, the best evidence the nature of the case admits of, because they are verified by a party who testifies in his
But, however lax may have been the practice in admitting evidence of this description, the books generally agree in attributing its admission to motives of convenience. The reasoning has been, that froni the character of the charges, and the general mode of transacting business in this country, it would be extremely difficult to obtain other proof, although not theoretically impossible, and although, in á given case, a witness might be found who witnessed the delivery of the articles, or happened to know that the services were rendered. It is said, in the case of Poultney vs. Ross, 1 Dall. 238, that in this country, from the necessity of the case, as business is often carried on by the principal, and many of our tradesmen do not keep clerks, the books, with the oath of the plaintiff, have always been admitted. And the same reason is given in Prime vs. Smith, 4 Mass. 457, where the practice is said to have arisen from a conformity to the actual state of things. To the same effect is Fosburgh vs. Thayer, 12 Johns. 461, in which case, however, Platt, J., dissented from the court, and denied that the admission of such evidence was necessary. We do not understand, however, that when courts speak of the necessity of the admission of this kind of evidence, any thing more is meant than that in practice its admission is highly convenient, where the dealings between the parties take place often without the presence of third persons, and are so numerous that it would be difficult to have written evidence of each, and when the procuring of formal proofs would hardly compensate for the time bestowed: the charges being so frequent in succession, and generally so trivial in their individual amount. In the case of Beach vs. Mills, 5 Conn. R. 496, Mr. Justice Brainard calls it a kind of moral necessity, and remarks that it is not to be expected that in the com
Such, undoubtedly, is the true explanation of the origin and gradual growth of this practice ; and the reason and the authorities seem to confine it to transactions between the debtor and creditor, when they stand to each other in the relation of plaintiff and defendant. In the case of Poultney vs. Ross, 1 Dall. 238, it is said that the shop book of a tradesman had not been admitted except to charge the original debtor to whom the goods were sold, and that it was not admissible to prove the promise of a third person to pay the debt. Kerr vs. Love, 1 Wash. 172; Deas vs. Darby, 1 Nott & McC. 436. But in the case of Mifflin vs. Bingham, 1 Dall. 272, it is intimated by McKean, C. J.,that the books of the defendant were admissible to determine a collateral question, whether a third person were the defendant’s debtor at a particular period. It was, however, afterwards held by the same court, that if such third person were a competent witness, as his oath would be better evidence than the books, they would not be admissible. Juniata Bank vs. Brown, 5 S. & R. 226. In the case of The People vs. Genung, 11 Wend. 18, upon an indictment for having obtained the signature of a person to a note by false pre-tences, it was held that the account books of the prisoner were not, of themselves, without other testimony, competent evidence of the state of the accounts between him and the prosecutor.
Without enquiring into the nature of the transaction that may be proved by the book and oath of the party — upon which point the decisions are very numerous — it is sufficient to say that such evidence is confined to suits between the debtor and creditor, whether the claim be made by the plaintiff or by the defendant, by way of set-off. The “ moral necessity” which, it is said, requires this proof in such cases, does not exist where the dealing between the debtor and
Verdict set aside.