Court Opinion

ID: 3577231
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:29:02.382361+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:52:02.241161
License: Public Domain

I think the court erred in refusing to strike out a portion of the testimony of the president of the plaintiff, which was not responsive to the question put to him, and that the error is a very serious one and ought not to be allowed to pass uncorrected lest it establish an unfortunate precedent.
The defendants contracted with the American Cereal Company to construct for it certain machinery for boxing and packing, for printing labels and for putting labels on boxes, and the contract included the furnishing of plates to print labels. Thereafter defendants entered into a contract with plaintiff to furnish, among other things, such plates. For the breach of that contract, among other things, a recovery has been had in this action.
Whether such plates were in accordance with the contract, and would print labels substantially equal to samples annexed to the contract, constituted the leading issue.
On the trial plaintiff's president testified that he visited the works of the American Cereal Company, and met there Mr. Russell, a representative of defendants. The following question was asked him by his counsel:
"Q. Will you now state what the conversation was between yourself and Russell at the place at Cedar Rapids, about this machine? *Page 130 
"Defendant objects as incompetent, immaterial, and that the defendant cannot be bound by the statements of Mr. Russell, and that the statements of the witness to Russell are merely hearsay and not binding upon the defendant.
"Received. Exception.
"Mr. Russell took me into the office of the Cereal Co. and made me acquainted with the superintendent. The superintendent showed me two packages of rolled oats, with labels pasted on same. On one package was a label of our make, printed from our plates, and the other package had a label the same as the one pinned on the contract, and he told me that the label printed off our press was equal to, and, in fact, superior to the other label, and he told me he saw the press running and he was very well satisfied with the work turned out. Mr. Russell also spoke about the press doing work very nicely, and that he was perfectly pleased with the result.
"Motion was made to strike out the statement that the witness says was made by the superintendent in the office of the Cereal Co. Motion limited to the statement made by the superintendent there to the witness, in the presence of Mr. Russell.
"Motion denied. Exception."
That portion of the answer which counsel moved to strike out was not responsive to the question. Counsel for defendant was right in his practice in moving to strike out, and if the evidence was incompetent, the refusal to grant his motion was error for which reversal should be had. (Holmes v. Roper,141 N.Y. 64, 69; Hickenbottom v. D., L.  W.R.R. Co., 122 N.Y. 91,98; Warren C.  M. Co. v. Holbrook, 118 N.Y. 586, 593;Denise v. Denise, 110 N.Y. 562, 567; Platner v. Platner,78 N.Y. 90, 102.)
The disastrous effect of this evidence upon the defense interposed is apparent at a glance. Defendants purchased the plates, machinery, etc., of plaintiff for the use of the American Cereal Company. That company was to pay defendants, and they were to pay plaintiff. So if plaintiff could prove that the Cereal Company, for which the work was done, was *Page 131 
satisfied with it, there would seem to be no excuse for the refusal of defendants to play plaintiff, and that view, necessarily, a jury would take.
It would have been competent, of course, for plaintiff to have proved that the Cereal Company accepted the work, and was satisfied with it, by the testimony of one of its officers having knowledge of the facts. It did not, however, and probably could not have done so. But it did something almost as effective, so far as the jury were concerned, for its president testified, without being requested to do so, that the superintendent of the Cereal Company told him in the presence of Mr. Russell, who was representing defendants, "that the label printed off our press was equal, and, in fact, superior to the other label, and he told me he saw the press running and he was very well satisfied with the work turned out."
Counsel for defendants struggled to get this most damaging bit of testimony out of the case. It is now sought to justify the court in retaining that testimony, in spite of the protest, not on the ground that plaintiff had the right to prove declarations of an officer of the Cereal Company in its behalf, but on the ground that, under the circumstances surrounding the making of the statement, it may be treated as an admission by defendants' representative, inasmuch as he did not protest against the statement.
It is true there have been instances, though few, in which the courts of this state have allowed the proving of statements of a third party as evidence of an admission on defendant's part when the circumstances surrounding the statement were such that it could be fairly said defendant was called upon to speak, and hence his failure to speak amounted to an admission.
This subject has been discussed in People v. Smith
(172 N.Y. 210, 233); People v. Kennedy (164 N.Y. 449, 456);People v. Page (162 N.Y. 272, 276); People v. Koerner
(154 N.Y. 355, 374); People v. Willett (92 N.Y. 29, 31);Lanergan v. People (39 N.Y. 39); People v. Holfelder
(5 N Y Crim. R. 179, 183).
My attention has been called to no case in this state where *Page 132 
such evidence was held to be admissible, and I have been able to find but two; and both of them are criminal cases: M'Kee v.People (36 N.Y. 113, 115) and Kelley v. People (55 N.Y. 565,571). In both of those cases the accused, immediately after the commission of the crime, made answer to some statements or questions and remained silent when other statements were made during the same conversation; and an account of the whole conversation was held admissible as a part of the res gestæ.
Attempts have been made to apply the rule in civil cases, but without effect. (Gibney v. Marchay, 34 N.Y. 301, 305;Thomas v. Gage, 141 N.Y. 506, 508; Bank of B.N.A. v.Delafield, 126 N.Y. 410, 418; Learned v. Tillotson, 97 N.Y. 1,8; Le Bau v. Vanderbilt, 3 Redf. 384, 393; Talcott v.Harris, 93 N.Y. 567, 571.)
Many of the cases in this state quote the following expression from one of the early English cases (Child v. Grace, 2 C. 
P. 193): "Really it is most dangerous evidence." Chief Justice BEST concluded in that case as follows: "I will never receive such evidence, unless, as my Lord KENYON used to say, the twelve judges in the House of Lords tell me that I must." In People v.Koerner (supra) it was said that such evidence "should always be received with caution, and ought not to be admitted unless the evidence is of direct declarations of a kind which naturally call for contradiction, or some assertion made to a party with respect to his rights, in which, by silence, he acquiesces."
Now it is sought to invoke this rule, which, according to this court, must be cautiously applied, to make out an admission, not of the party himself, but of his representative.
If it were prudent to extend this exceptional rule to civil cases, it certainly should not be applied in a case like this, where the circumstances surrounding its making certainly did not call upon defendants' representative to challenge it. The defendants were then attempting to complete the work satisfactorily to the American Cereal Company, so that they could receive their compensation; and, necessarily, it was in *Page 133 
their interest at that time to satisfy the Cereal Company, and to persuade its officers, if they could, that the press was printing labels "equal and, in fact, superior to the other labels." It seems little short of absurd to suggest that defendants' representative was bound at that time to protest that the superintendent was wrong, and that, in fact, the plates were poor and the press good for nothing, or else must be deemed to have made an admission that the superintendent was right, although later on the controlling officers of the Cereal Company might have reached an entirely different conclusion than the superintendent, and condemned both press and plates.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
BARTLETT, MARTIN and VANN, JJ., concur with HAIGHT, J.; GRAY and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur with PARKER, Ch. J.
Judgment affirmed.