The principal question presented in the case at bar is, whether the indorsement of the $260 due on the wood contracts upon the note, was due by the direction and consent of James S. Griswold, and was a payment by him which prevents his interposing the defense of the statute of limitations. The money thus indorsed was due from the plaintiff to the defendants, Sherman & James.S. Griswold, upon their joint contract. As joint owners both parties were equally interested in it, and both consented to this appropriation of it. Although Sherman alone was present at the settlement, yet there is some reason for urging that the application was the act of both the parties, and hence that J ames has made the payment as much as Sherman. The referee has found, and there appears to be sufficient evidence to warrant the conclusion at which he arrived, that J ames S. Griswold consented that the money due on the wood contracts should be indorsed on this note, and after it was indorsed said it was all right. James certainly assented to this application of it, prior to its being made, and subsequently affirmed it. Conceding, however, that the payment was not made by James S. Griswold himself, yet the evidence shows that it was made by his agent, by his direction and authority. He was a party to the contracts. When called upon by the plaintiff to pay some money on the note, he consented that the money due on the contracts might be indorsed upon the note. The principal was present at the time of the settlement, was interested in it and assented to the arrangement. At the time James assented to this appropriation of the money he was liable to pay the note, and the conversation with the plaintiff was an express direction to him and to Sherman to make the payment. It was virtually an act done by James S. Griswold’s agent, for his benefit, and he must be held responsible for the consequences. I think there was substantially a request to the principal to make the payment, and it having been done, it must be regarded as the act of both parties, and an acknowledgment by James S. *22Griswold of the debt, sufficient to take the case out of the statute of limitations, within the principle laid down in Winchell v. Hicks, (18 N. Y. Rep. 558.)
Upon the trial of the case the defendant James S. Gris-wold offered to prove that the contracts introduced in evidence were made for the sole benefit of Sherman Griswold, and that the defendant James S. Griswold-signed them at the request of Sherman Griswold and as surety for him ; that Sherman Griswold alone owned the wood and was interested in the contract, and that the money due upon the contract belonged to him alone. The defendant also offered, as an independent proposition, to show that the money found due upon the contracts belonged to Sherman Griswold alone, and that the defendant James S. Griswold had no right to it, or to any part of it. These offers were objected to by the plaintiff and rejected by the referee, and the defendant excepted. They embrace the- same principle, and may properly be considered together.
With the views already expressed upon the other question in the case, the evidence perhaps could have no material bearing upon the issue involved. I incline also to think that the evidence was otherwise objectionable. There was evidence to prove that when James was asked by the plaintiff’ for some money, he said what was due on the wood must be indorsed on the note; and after the indorsement was made and he was informed of it he said it was all right, and they would pay the balance as fast as they could. The contracts show that both Sherman and James S. Gris-wold were jointly interested, and the legal presumption is that the money arising from the contracts belonged to both the parties. The plaintiff acted upon the statement made by James to him, and made the indorsement in accordance with it, and it was ratified by James S. Griswold, afterwards. The evidence offered would have contradicted the declaration of the party upon which the plaintiff had acted in making the indorsement; and in a suit upon the note the indorse*23ment would have been evidence of a payment of so much money.
It is said that the defendant did not request the plaintiff to do or forbear to do any act, and there is no evidence to show that the plaintiff was led to do any act in consequence thereof prejudicial to himself, and that he loses nothing in consequence of the indorsement. He expressly told the plaintiff that what was due must be indorsed on the note, thereby directing the manner in which it should be appropriated, and subsequently ratified this appropriation of the money. Here was an absolute request, and an absolute payment of so much money, which could not be canceled. By making the indorsement at the defendant’s request the plaintiff had reason to suppose that the time which the note had to run was extended, and his delay to prosecute it within the six years from date may perhaps have been caused by this request of the defendant. If the proof was material and had been received, it might have deprived the plaintiff of the benefit of the request made and of the admission of the party.
Admissions of a party, whether of law or of fact, when acted upon by others, are conclusive against the party making them, in all cases between him and the person whose conduct he has thus influenced. (1 Green. Ev. § 267, p. 271. Reynolds v. Lounsbury, 6 Hill, 534. Welland Canal Co. v. Hathaway, 8 Wend. 480. Dezell v. Odell, 3 Hill, 215. Gilleland, ex’r, v. Failing, 5 Denio, 308.)
Within the principle laid down in Dezell v. Odell, it appeared, 1st. That the defendant had made an admission which was clearly inconsistent with the evidence he proposed to give; 2d. That the plaintiff had acted upon the admission, and 3d. That he would be injured by allowing the truth of the admission to be disproved ; and I think the referee properly excluded the evidence.
I am also of the opinion that the statement of the account rendered by Sherman Griswold in the settlement, April 26, 1859, and the receipt at the bottom of the statement was. *24properly received in evidence. It was a part of the transaction which took place at the time, and as such, admissible testimony.
[Albany General Term, September 7, 1863.The judgment entered upon the report of the referee must be affirmed, with costs.
Hogeboom, J. concurred.
G-otjld, J. expressed no opinion.
Judgment affirmed.
Gould, Sogeioam and Miller, Justices.]