Court Opinion

ID: 6428686
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:06:15.982182+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:06.110725
License: Public Domain

Banker, J.
On August 10, 1899, the defendant and one Frissell, the plaintiff’s predecessor in title, executed a lease for the term of three years from August 11,1899. On May 1,1901, Frissell conveyed the leased property to the plaintiff. The action is to recover unpaid rent from March 10, 1902, to August 10, 1902.
The case was tried with a jury and after a verdict for the defendant comes here upon exceptions taken at the trial to the admission and exclusion of evidence.
1. The evidence tended to show that the premises were first occupied by the defendant personally, and then by one Deming to whom the defendant sold out his business; that Deming in turn sold out to the defendant’s son who upon his purchase occupied the premises, and that afterward they were occupied in turn by Haskell and Hastings, Haskell and Blanchard, and C. W. Haskell, until vacated'in June, 1902, and.that at the time of the plaintiff’s purchase the actual occupation was by the defendant’s son who bought out Deming.
One defence relied on was that during Deming’s occupancy the original lessor and then owner Frissell had with the assent of the defendant made a new lease directly to Deming of the premises for the then unexpired term of the original lease. Oral evidence of this lease to Deming was admitted subject to the *509plaintiff’s exception. He now contends that evidence of the contents of the lease was inadmissible because the defendant had given the plaintiff no notice to produce the original document, and, Frissell’s deposition having been taken by the plaintiff, had not asked Frissell to produce the Deming lease or to testify concerning it, and because there was no sufficient proof of its loss.
It did not appear where Deming was at the time of the trial and he was not called as a witness. The evidence tended to show that when Deming bought out the defendant Deming came, up to Holyoke from Hartford, Connecticut, and remained on the premises some six or seven weeks when he sold out to the younger Collins. The defendant testified that all he knew about Deming was that when he bought the business he came from Hartford, and that he liad made inquiries in Holyoke concerning the whereabouts of Deming but had received no information. '
As the Deming lease was not a document which the plaintiff would be expected to have in his own possession and as the bill of exceptions does not state that the plaintiff claimed that he could have produced it if he had received notice so to do, the fact that no notice to produce it had been given did not make the secondary evidence inadmissible. Neither did the defendant’s omission to put cross interrogatories to Frissell asking him to annex it to his deposition. So far as appears the lease was not in duplicate and was given to Deming. In fact Frissell in answer to direct interrogatories addressed to him by the plaintiff in his deposition and also in answer to cross interrogatories propounded by the defendant had in substance testified that, at the place and on the occasion when the defendant testified the deponent Frissell had given the lease to Deming, he had signed some paper which embodied his then agreement with the defendant as to the leased premises, he testifying that it was an agreement that the defendant might sublet to Deming.
The question whether the situation was such as to make secondary evidence of the contents of the instrument admissible was for the court. Donelson v. Taylor, 8 Pick. 390. Page v. Page, 15 Pick. 368. We do not find in the bill of exceptions anything to show that the decision of the presiding judge to *510admit the secondary evidence was wrong. He fairly might infer that Deming had the custody of the document and that he was not within reach of the process of the court.
2. Some parts of Frissell’s deposition were excluded against the plaintiff’s exception, which in our opinion should have been admitted. The twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh interrogatories called for conversations between the deponent and the defendant. We see no ground for excluding these questions and answers. “4 What a party says ’ observes Mr. Justice Parke, ‘is evidence against himself, as an admission, whether it relates to the contents of a written paper, or to anything else.’ ” Loomis v. Wadhams, 8 Gray, 557, 562, and cases cited.
3. The defendant’s contention being that he was not liable because' either Frissell or the plaintiff, or both, had accepted other persons than the defendant as tenants and had collected rent of them as such tenants, this made admissible evidence that Frissell and the plaintiff had in fact continued to treat the defendant and not the actual occupants of the premises as tenants liable for the rent. Whicher v. Cottrell, 165 Mass. 351. For this reason we think that the testimony of Frissell in answer to the eighteenth interrogatory, that he gave receipts in the defendant’s name, and the testimony offered that the plaintiff himself, although he collected rent from the occupants, invariably made out his bills and receipts in the name of the defendant, should have been admitted.
4. The plaiutiff’s account book was not admissible to show to whom he credited the payments of rent and was properly excluded.
As some evidence offered by the plaintiff was wrongly excluded the verdict must be set aside and there must be a new trial.

Exceptions sustained.