Court Opinion

ID: 8061618
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:39:16.371995+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:04.632038
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
The case discloses that the issue tried presented a pure question of fact. It was properly presented to the jury and the verdict may be supported on the evidence, unless it is objectionable on the ground disclosed by affidavits taken under the rule.
*531From those affidavits it appears that among the papers sent to the jury one was included which had been excluded when offered by defendant; one which had been admitted in evi■dence in defendant’s behalf was not sent to the jury.
There is no reason to conclude that this error was intentional on defendant’s part. On the contrary, it clearly .appears that plaintiff’s counsel and his principal witness (him.self a New York lawyer and plaintiff’s agent) had examined the papers before they were sent to the jury, .and the mistake .seems to have been participated in by all concerned.
But apart from that consideration we are of the opinion ¡that the irregularity could have done no possible injury to plaintiff.
The action was against a surety to recover rent for certain •specified mouths of the term of a lease. There was evidence ■on the part of defendant that the rent for those months had been paid. To corroborate that evidence defendant offered a number of receipts which acknowledged the'payment of rent accruing on the lease for subsequent months of the term.
The only evidential force of such receipts was to raise an inference of the payment of the rent previously accrued. •
The receipt offered and excluded was for $20, and did not ■disclose that it was for rent; when offered plaintiff’s counsel said that he did not object to its going to the jury for what it was worth, but the court excluded it.
The receipt admitted, which was not sent to the jury, was for $40, and was for rent.
As the evidence did not affect the amount due, but only the existence of any indebtedness, we think no injury was ■done by the improper submission to the jury of the excluded receipt.
Let the rule be discharged.