Court Opinion

ID: 5544748
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 18:56:37.426868+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:53.713860
License: Public Domain

Bischoff, J.
Only one of the grounds urged for reversal of the judgment appealed from is of sufficient importance to merit discussion,—that relating to the exclusion of secondary evidence of the letter alleged to have been written and sent by plaintiff’s assignor to the defendant on July 23, 1890, and to have been returned by the defendant. This, upon examination, proves of no avail to appellant. It was not attempted to show, or was it even claimed, that the alleged letter was at any time in the possession or control of the plaintiff. The service of a notice to produce it upon him was therefore wholly nugatory, and without effect; and, assuming that the denial of plaintiff’s assignor, while examined as a witness for the plaintiff, that he ever wrote such a letter, obviated the need of serving him with a subpoena duces tecum to cause its production on the trial, it still remained for the defendant to establish the existence of the letter, its subsequent loss or destruction, and his inability to produce it, by evidence so convincing in its character that its rejection by the trial judge constituted legal error. These matters presented preliminary questions of fact, to be determined by the trial judge before receiving or excluding secondary evidence of the contents of the alleged letter. The judge presiding at the trial has the advantage of hearing and seeing the witnesses, and their demeanor while under examination may largely influence him in attaching a greater or lesser degree of credibility to their respective statements than otherwise would be the case, and an appellate court should not for that reason disturb his ruling when founded exclusively upon the conflicting statements of witnesses. Mason v. Libbey, 90 N. Y. 683. To justify a reversal of the ruling of the trial judge excluding secondary evidence of the alleged contents of a written instrument it has been held that the proof of its loss or destruction should be so conclusive that it would be error of law not to hold it sufficient. Kearney v. Mayor, etc., 92 N. Y. 617, 621. This *176must, of necessity, apply with equal force to-the evidence relied upon to prove that the instrument alleged to have been lost or destroyed did at one time exist; for that which never existed cannot be lost or destroyed. Tayl. Ev. § 429; Wood, Pr. Ev. § 8; Nichols v. Iron Ore Co., 56 N. Y. 618. Upon the trial of 'this action only two witnesses testified to the receipt, on July 23,1890, by the -defendant of a letter addressed to him, and.in the handwriting of plaintiff’s •assignor, Cronin,—the defendant himself, and Quinn, his book-keeper. The farmer’s statement could have been discredited as that of a party in interest, 'though wholly unchallenged, (Kearney v. Mayor, etc., 92 N. Y. 621, and -cases cited,) and the refutation of the latter’s testimony is found in Cronin’s denial that-he ever wrote such a letter. Here, then, was a question of veracity between these two witnesses, which the trial judge solved in favor of -Cronin; and it is impossible for us to say that he erred. If it is urged by the appellant that his testimony and that of his book-keeper were corroborated by the testimony of other witnesses for the defense, to the effect that on the ■morning of July 23, 1890, they heard Cronin say to the defendant that his letter of resignation was in the mail, we answer that testimony as to alleged oral admissions of facts in dispute (particularly so when the witnesses are confessedly stating but the fragment of a conversation) is evidence of such inferior quality that error in law should not be predicated upon a refusal to •credit it in the face of positive denials of the facts alleged to have been admitted by the party charged with the admission. 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 199, 200. But, assuming that the existence of the disputed letter was established by ■evidence of such a nature as to command credit, it still remains for the defendant to prove its loss or destruction, and his inability to produce it in consequence thereof, by evidence so conclusive as to repel every inference that ■it was fraudulently destroyed or intentionally withheld. Wood, Pr. Ev.,§ 8; Renner v. Bank, 9 Wheat. 581. On this point, also, the defendant relied exclusively upon his own testimony and that of Quinn. These witnesses said that they had seen the letter; that Quinn, at the direction of defendant, in-dorsed a statement thereon to the effect that further communications from Cronin were unwelcome; that it was thereupon inclosed in an envelope, addressed to Cronin, and thus deposited in the mail. The person by whom the ■letter was mailed, and the place where it was mailed, were, however, not •stated. Ho other attempt was made to explain the defendant’s inability to produce the letter. His own testimony was subject to discredit as that of an interested party, while Cronin declined to be positive in his statements; and a careful reading of his testimony shows that his statement that Cronin’s alleged letter was returned to him by máil was not made upon his personal knowledge of that fact. The evidence was therefore wholly destitute of the character required. The judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with -costs.