To an action upon a promissory note, made by the firm of Haters & Co., of which the defendant was a member, the defense of the Statute of Limitations was interposed, and the sole issue in the case was whether payments had been made upon the instrument within- six years before the commencement of the action, which payments became binding upon the defendant, thereby removing the bar of the statute.
The plaintiff was the payee of the note, óf date August 4, 1888, payable in six months; and the action was commenced February 4, 1896; thus the lapse of more than six years between the accrual of the cause of action and its enforcement was apparent and the action was barred,, unless circumstances suspending the operation of "the statute were shown:
An actual payment o’f interest upon this note, made by the firm- of Daters & Co. to the plaintiff on February 7, 1891, was testified to, and while the defendant now attacks this testimony as lacking in particularity and as being vagué and inconclusive, it certainly furnished sufficient evidence to justify the denial of . the motion for the dismissal of the complaint, and this is. as far as we may inquire into the sufficiency of the proof.
-It is claimed, however, that the firm was dissolved in the year 1889, and that there was no authority in any person to bind the ..defendant after that time, but from "the evidence that a payment was made by the firm itself in 1891, the jury could have inferred" the assent of all the partners to such an act, since it was the act of all ‘ as a" firm, or the fact of the dissolution might not have been found, this resting solely upon the uncorroborated testimony of the defendant himself, an interested witness.
*311No notice of this alleged dissolution was shown to have been given and the plaintiff’s evidence as to the firm’s own act of payment in 1891, supported a finding that that firm was in existence at the time, at least for this purpose.
So far there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury, but there remains to be considered the point made by the appellant that the issues were submitted to that body upon yet a further and untenable ground for the imposition of liability.
It appeared that as lately as December 18, 1893, a payment upon this note was made by one Sturgis, an employee of the firm of Daters & Co., but not one of its members, and the court left it to the jury to say whether Sturgis had power to bind the defendant by this payment.
According.to the defendant’s testimony, ¡Sturgis was employed as a bookkeeper at the time of such payment and was assisting one Hoffman, a member or ex-member of the firm, in winding up its business. ■
The defendant further testified that Hoffman had authority from him to make payments, and testimony was given by the plaintiff’s attorney, called as a witness, that the defendant had admitted to him that “ these payments ” (alluding to the payments of 1893, and earlier) “ were made with Mr. Hoffman’s authority.” Thus it would seem that the jury might have found Sturgis’ act to have been binding upon the defendant, but the matter is not brought before us for review by any exception in the record and its discussion, therefore, becomes unnecessary.
In the course of argument upon the defendants’ final motion for the dismissal of the complaint, the court stated the grounds for an adverse ruling, one of which was the propriety of submitting to the jury the question as to the payment by Sturgis in 1893, and the motion was denied under exception.
This exception presented no error, since the' ruling was in any event supported by the evidence of the payment made by the firm in 1891, and the defendant took no exception to the charge of the court with regard to the matter of Sturgis’ agency, nor was the question presented by any requests to charge.
But one request was made and this had to do with the burden of proof of authority in the person making any payment, after the dissolution of the firm, in order that the defendant might be affected by such payment. The refusal to charge this request, as framed, was clearly proper, since the proposition was directly *312founded upon the assumption that there had been a dissolution as testified to by the defendant, while this testimony, being that, of an interested witness, was not conclusive and was for the jury to credit or not, in their discretion.
Exception was taken to the admission in evidence of two letters from Sturgis to the plaintiff, which had been sent at the time of .payments on account of the note in suit. These letters were relevant and material to the matters at issue, and, while Sturgis’ agency to' bind the defendant was not apparent when they were admitted in evidence, it by no means appeared that proof to connect him with them might not be afterwards forthcoming. It was discretionary with the- court to admit the documents at the time and, if' the defendant was not satisfied that they were finally made competent by proof, a motion to strike them from the record should have been made (United States Vinegar Co. v. Schlegel, 143 N. Y. 537), but there was no such motion, and, indeed, some evidence of agency appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff’s attorney as to the defendant’s admission that the payments were made by him, Hoffman’s authority, taken in connection with the defendant’s own testimony that Hoffman was empowered to bind him by making payments. ;
There was no error in the reception of these letters, when offered, which could require a reversal óf the judgment (Kraus v. J. H. Mohlman Co., 18 Misc. Rep. 433; Pohalski v. Ertheiler, id. 33), and it would appear that the connecting proof was sufficient as against a possible motion to -strike out this evidence, which, however, was not made.
Ho other points are brought to our attention, and we conclude that the judgment should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
Daly, P. J., and McAdam, J., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.