This action is brought to enforce a written guaranty claimed to have been executed by this defendant through its president, Joseph M. Cohn. An examination before trial of the defendant through its claimed president, Joseph M. Cohn, has heretofore been ordered. On that examination the relator, after answering that his recollection was that he had been president of the defendant company at one time, and after stating that the signature to the claimed guaranty in question was his, and after stating that he' signed it on December 10,1908, was asked the two fol-, lowing questions: 1. “ Were you president of the *429defendant Cohn Cut Stone Company at the time you signed this paper, ' Jos. M. Cohn, President? ’ ” 2. “ I show you exhibit A and ask you if the seal at the left side of the bottom of the sheet is the corporate seal of the Cohn Cut Stone Company? ” The witness declined to answer each of these questions, by the advice of counsel as he stated, on the ground that the answers might tend to incriminate him. The relator’s counsel was with him at the time of the examination and was permitted to consult with the relator before the relator’s refusal to answer. The proceedings before the referee have been certified to me and a motion is made to require the said Joseph M. Cohn to answer the above questions.
At first glance I confess it appeared to me almost ridiculous to permit this witness to refuse to answer these questions. They appear harmless enough, and it seemed at first that the plaintiff should be unquestionably allowed to obtain this information from such a direct source. However, it must be borne in mind that the relator has been brought before the referee in this manner before trial against his will and to further the purposes of the plaintiff. And while this is not a criminal action or a proceeding of a criminal nature wherein the relator could take advantage of his constitutional privilege of not testifying against himself, still we must bear in mind that section 837 of our New York Code of Civil Procedure states that “ This provision [that a competent witness shall not be excused from answering a relevant question] does not require a witness to give an answer, which will tend to accuse himself of a crime or misdemeanor.” In l .investigating this matter I have been impressed by 'some of the observations of the court in its opinions in People ex rel. Taylor v. Forbes, 143 N. Y. 219, and People v. Priori, 164 id. 459. Of course, these were *430criminal cases, but the principle involved seems to be substantially the same as that now under discussion. In the first mentioned case the court makes it clear that a witness under this section is privileged to refrain from divulging, not only all the facts and circumstances which might subject him to successful prosecution for a crime, but to refrain from furnishing a single link in a, chain of facts capable of being used to his detriment or peril. Furthermore, as the court says in the Taylor case: “The witness who knows what the court does not know, and what he cannot disclose without accusing himself, must in such cases judge for himself as to the effect of his answer, and if, to his mind, it may constitute a link in the chain of testimony, sufficient to convict him, when other facts are shown, or to put him in jeopardy, or subject him to the hazard of a criminal charge, indictment or trial, he may remain silent. While the guilty may use the privilege as a shield it may be the main protection of the innocent, since it is quite conceivable that a person may be placéd in such circumstances, connected with the commission of a criminal offense, that if required to disclose other facts within his knowledge he ‘ might, though innocent, be looked upon as the guilty party.”
Of course, as is further said in the Taylor case, “ The weight of authority seems to be in favor of the rule that the witness may. be compelled .to answer when he contumaciously refuses, or when it is perfectly clear and plain that he is mistaken, and that the answer cannot possibly injure him, or tend in any degree to subject him to the peril of. prosecution. But the courts have recognized the impossibility in most cases of anticipating the effect of the answer. Where it is' not' so perfectly .evident and manifest that the answer called for cannot incriminate, as to preclude *431all reasonable doubt or fair argument, the privilege must be recognized and protected. ’ ’
Harmless as these questions appear it is extremely difficult in the case before me for the court to say whether or not the answers required will subject the witness to the peril of prosecution. I cannot well say on the record before me, or for record purposes, that the refusal to answer is contumacious without requiring. the witness to file an affidavit particularly specifying his reasons; and the requiring of that might do the very mischief which section 837 seeks to prevent.
Therefore, since the witness has filed an affidavit stating the reasons for his refusal to answer — very general reasons to be sure — since his counsel has stated in open court his real reasons for refusing to answer which, of course, cannot be a matter of record, and since the facts sought to be obtained seem to be readily obtainable otherwise, I have determined not to require the witness' to answer. If in good faith the witness feels that the answering of these questions, apparently so harmless, would subject him to the risk of prosecution for committing a crime — and the court must conclude that the witness is of that opinion since he invokes the aid of the statute — he should be permitted to shield himself beneath the cloak provided by our legislature for those who feel themselves thus in jeopardy.
Ordered accordingly.