This action is brought to recover the, damages sustained by the plaintiff as payee of a -promissory note, by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant in failing to give proper ánd timely notice of protest to the indorser thereon.
The note was made by one Starbird to the order of the plaintiff, , was indorsed by Ira Van Grieson and deposited by the plaintiff with the defendant bank for collection. When it fell due it was presented for-payment and dishonored. The notary clerk in the bank' thereupon prepared notices -of protest, one to the plaintiff, which was mailed to him at his proper address, and one which was intended for the indorser. The indorsement upon the note not being /clearly written,- the notary clerk made a mistake in the, name, and instead ■ of reading it Ira Van Grieson, he concluded that it. was “ Waran *539Gilson,” and as the address of such a person could not be found the notice to the indorser was inclosed with the one sent to the plaintiff, together with the statement: “ Please forward the enclosed at once.” This notice was never received by Van Gieson, and, as appears from a-stipulation m the case, the attempt by the plaintiff to collect the amount of the note from him was unsuccessful (Howard v. Van Gieson, 46 App. Div. 77; Howard v. Van Gieson, 56 App. Div. 217), for the reason that the indorser was relieved from liability through the failure to give him proper notice of protest.
Upon this trial it was made to appear that the maker of the note was financially irresponsible, and the plaintiff contends that the defendant is liable for the damages caused by the release of the indorser through its alleged negligence in mistaking the name and not giving the proper notice of protest. That Van Gieson’s name as it appeared upon the note was so illegible as to be. easily mistaken was conceded, and practically no claim was made at the trial that the notary clerk was negligent in misreading it.- But the plaintiff alleges that at the time he left the note with the defendant for collection, he called attention to the fact that he believed the maker was financially irresponsible, and handed to the person in the bank who received the note from him a card bearing upon it, clearly written, the name and address of the indorser.
If the bank, having the true name and address in its possession at the time the note was protested, nevertheless made the error which it is conceded was made, then the jury would have been justified in finding that, under such circumstances, it was negligent in not mailing the notice of protest to the address of the indorser as given upon the card.- Whether or not the card was presented as claimed, was the sharply contested issue at the trial.
Upon the subject, the plaintiff testified that at the time he received the note, the maker Starbird gave him a card upon which he had written the name of the indorser, “Dr. Ira Van Gieson,” and his address, “jj 1 Madison .Ave., City,” and that the plaintiff thereupon wrote upon the card, in pencil, the words, “Director Path. Institute State of N. Y.; ” that at the time he took the note to the bank, shortly after January 5, 1898, he handed to the note teller the note itself, the card referred to, and certain stock which was to *540be held as collateralthat at. the same /time he asked the teller to be careful in protesting- the note, as he did not consider the maker good and expected to hold the indorser, for which reason he gave the bank the card so that it might know the ñame and address of, the indorser. He testified further that he told the teller that he ■ ' expected to be away from the city when the note fell due, and that shortly after depositing the note at the bank he did leave the city, and was absent therefrom almost continuously until April eighteenth ; that upon his return he discovered that the note had been dishonored, went to the bank and received upon request an envelope containing the stock, the. nóte and the certificate of protest thereof; that upon subsequently examining the contents of the envelope he found that the bard, was missing, and upon the next day returned to the bank and asked for .it; that, the card was then found and handed to him; that his dealings at the time of getting the note back were with the same person who had originally received it, from’ him ; that' thereafter he had a conversation with the defendant’s cashier, Evans, in which he called his attention to the situation, and informed him that he would hold the bank responsible for its failure to properly protest the note.' .
The notary clerk, Power, who protested the note, was called for ■ the plaintiff and testified that he had received no stock or card with the note and that at the time it was prof estéd there was not upon Ahe note any address of- the indorser, and that he could not ascertain that address from any one in the bank. This is substantially all the evidence offered by the plaintiff; and as to the crucial facts in the case, he is, "therefore, practically uncorroborated.
For the defendant, the witness Laffey was called and testified that he was the person who received the note from the plaintiff, and he contradicts the plaintiff absolutely as to receiving the card or stock at that or any other time. He stated that when the note was handed to him by the plaintiff, nothing at all accompanied it .and there was no conversation with'reference to the fact that the plain- ■ tiff was. going ■ out of the city and Wanted the bank to be careful that the note was properly protested, as he did'not believe "the maker to be good. He testified also that aftér the note had been dishonored, " ' the plaintiff got it from him, and neither at that time nor at any xsubsequent time did he ask for a card, and that neither he (the wit*541ness) nor anybody else, in his presence, ever returned the card to the plaintiff.
The receiving teller of the bank, Searle, testified that when the note came into his hands there was no stock with it and no card attached to it in any way, and the cashier,. Evans, testified that at no time subsequent to the dishonoring of the note did he, according to his recollection, have any conversation with the plaintiff.
It will thus be seen that the plaintiff was contradicted upon nearly every material point by witnesses called for the defendant; and upon this conflicting evidence a question of fact was presented which was properly submitted to the jury, and their finding in favor of the defendant is certainly not against the weight of evidence. Not only is the plaintiff’s testimony contradicted by the defendant’s witnesses, but his own statements on this trial differ in certain material particulars from those made by him upon the trial of his former action against Van Gieson, and these circumstances, together with the fact that he is an interested party and practically uncorroborated, show that the verdict in favor of the defendant was, to say the least, not an improper one. ■
The judgment appealed from must, therefore, be affirmed, unless there was some reversible error committed at the trial.
Many rulings of the trial court were brought to our attention by the appellant, and we have examined them all with care, but have discovered no errors which require a reversal, and we do not deem it necessary to specifically consider any of the rulings except one.
Upon the back of the note as it was introduced in evidence, and under the name of the indorser., appeared in lead pencil the words, “ 1 Madison Ave., Path. Institute of State N. Y.” It is conceded that this pencil indorsement was not upon the note when it was left at the bank, nor when it came into the hands of the notary and was protested by him. The plaintiff now testifies that it was upon the note, however, when he got it back from the bank, although upon a former trial he had testified that those words were in his own handwriting, and consequently could not have been there until after the note had come again into his possession. In order to' explain this discrepancy he now testifies that on account of bejng near-sighted he was mistaken as "to the handwriting when he gave his former testimony, but that upon a further examination of the *542pencil .indorsement he is satisfied that it was not written by him. Ho further evidence was offered upon the subject of,the handwriting of the pencil indorsement upoil the note before the- plaintiff closed his case. ' • . .
After the defense had put in all of its evidence, however, an ■ expert in handwriting, Carvalho, was called, was shown the pencil ¡ indorsement upon the mote, also the similar words written in pencil upon the card and concededly in the handwriting of the plaintiff, and also two letters concededly in the handwriting of Laffey. With these instruments, before him, the witness, who had been duly qualified, was asked' to state whether, in his opinion, the pencil memoranda upon the note was in the same handwriting as the . '-.pencil memoranda upon the' card, to'yit, the plaintiff’s, or in the same handwriting as the letters, to wit, Laffey’s. .' This question w.as ■ objected to as incompetent and improper ;■ that no foundation had . " been laid for itthat it was speculative and not rebuttal evidence. The objection was sustained and the plaintiff excepted.
We do hot think the ruling of the trial court presents a reversi- '. ble error. Hb rule for the conduct, of- trials is more familiar than that the. party holding the affirmative is bound to introduce all the evidence on his, side before he closes. He must exhaust all his testimony in support of the issue on. his side, before testimony on the opposite side-is heard. He- can afterwards introduce evidence in rebuttal only, and rebutting evidence in such cases means not merely / evidence which contradicts the witnesses on the opposite side and corroborates those of the party who began, but evidence in denial of some affirmative fact which the answering party has endeavored to prove. (Marshall v. Davies, 78 N. Y. 414.) The rule has been . correctly stated by Mr, justice McLaughlin in Barson v. Mulligan, (77 App. Div. 192), where it is said:. “ Hpon a trial a party is bound to produce all his evidence before he closes his side of the case, and after he has closed his case and rested, it is within the discretion of the court whether or not to allow a reopening of the case to supply omissions or. to receive further testimony, but such discretion shall be sparingly exercised.” (Agate v. Morrison, 84 N. Y. 672; Young v. Johnson, 123 id. 226.)
• It Nis the theory of the plaintiff that if he could show that the ■ pencil indorsement upon the note was in the handwriting of Laffey " *543the inference would follow that Laffey had before him the disputed card, which would corroborate the claim that the card had been left . with the bank. But if the plaintiff desired to prove this he should have done so upon his original case. The witness Laffey when upon the stand was not asked whether or not he had made the pencil indorsement upon- the note, so the testimony offered was not in direct contradiction of any statement made by him, and it was not, a denial of any affirmative fact which the defendant had endeavored to prove. Therefore, it was not rebuttal evidence, the trial court could in its discretion exclude it, and'we do not think that the ruling was any abuse of this discretion.
It- is extremely doubtful whether the testimony would- have been admissible at any stage of the case. Its only materiality is in creating an inference that the card was in the possession of the bank. But, assuming that the witness would have testified that the pencil indorsement on the note was in the handwriting of Laffey, which is the view most favorable to the plaintiff, it does not follow that Laffey had the card in his possession when he made that indorsement. It is true he testifies that the note was not in his possession from the time it matured “ until Mr. Howard brought it to my window,, making this claim that it had been improperly protested.” But. assuming that Laffey did make the indorsement, he might have made it at the time last mentioned; at any rate, as already stated, it was eonóeded that the memorandum was not upon the note at the time of the protest, and that being so, it must have been put there after that time, and Laffey might have received the inforipation necessary to make the memorandum from many sources other than the card. The inference that he got it from the card is, therefore,, too speculative, problematical, uncertain and remote to render the evidence competent or of probative force. For this reason it was inadmissible and properly excluded.
I think, therefore, that the judgment and order appealed -from are right and should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.