The action is brought by the seller for the purpose of recovering the purchase price of goods which were delivered to the defendant by the seller, consisting of 5,914J yards of dress goods. The plaintiff, the seller, claims that title to the goods has passed to the vendee, and, therefore, that it is entitled to recover the purchase price. It was so held by the court, provided the goods were of the quality contracted for. That question was left to the jury, which decided in favor of the plaintiff.
A new trial of this case would be required because of the admission in evidence of plaintiff’s Exhibit 17. That was a letter by the plaintiff to the defendant, which charged the defendant with deceit, and charged him with breaking his contract because of the fall in the market. That was essentially a self-serving document and its admission was wholly without justification. It was in answer to nothing that called for such a letter, and the rule is a salutary one that a person cannot make evidence for himself by writing a letter to his adversary and thereafter introducing that letter in evidence before a jury. As there was a sharp question of fact in the case as to the quality of the goods, we cannot say that the evidence did not have material effect in leading the jury to the conclusion which was reached, and the admission of this letter was error sufficient to authorize a new trial of the action.
But the plaintiff’s difficulty, as I view the case, lies deeper than this. The goods were first delivered and were not received by the defendant, it is claimed, through an error of the defendant’s receiving clerk. A letter was written by the plaintiff to the defendant notifying him of this rejection and saying that the goods would be sold for the account of the defendant and the defendant charged with the deficiency. Thereupon the defendant sent to the plaintiff a telegram in these words: “ Had instructed receiving clerk to accept merchandise of invoice of January 15th.” That telegram was dated January seventeenth. Upon the same day the defendant’s attorneys wrote to the plaintiff that the refusal to allow a delivery of the goods was a mistake, and said: "You will please send them in, and if they are in accordance with the contract,
It follows that the judgment and order should be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Merrell and Finch, JJ., concur; Martin, J., concurs in result.
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.