We have reached the conclusion that error was committed by the learned referee in receiving the evidence of the plaintiff in her own behalf relative to the contents of the tin box which she, on the 15th day of November, 1873, received from the hands of the testator, and on the same day returned to his custody, with the contents thereof, as testified to by her. This evidence, standing alone, if believed, would have justified the finding that on that day the decedent had in his hands certain bonds, most of them negotiable, belonging to the plaintiff, kept separate from his own securities of a like character, amounting to the sum of about $53,000. On a careful and patient examination of all the evidence in the case, we have failed to discover that the fact which this evidence tended to prove was established beyond fair dispute by the other proofs in the case, so that the error might be disregarded by us on this review of the case. It is true that the other evidence in the ease tended to prove the fact sought to be established by the incompe-. tent evidence, but the judicial mind cannot say that the fact in dispute wras conclusively established by the other proofs.
The only safe rule to be adopted by an appellate court in considering exceptions taken by a defeated party to the reception of incompetent evidence bearing on a inaterial issue is to observe the rule as stated by Chief Justice Church in Foote v. Beecher, 78 N. Y. 158, which is stated in the following words: “If the evidence is slight or irrelevant, or if without it the fact is conclusively established by other evidence, it may be disregarded, because it, could not have injured the other party.” The parties have the right to the judgment of the court founded on competent evidence. The defendant’s intestate had in his own right large sums of money which he, for the last 20 years of his life, invested in western securities of the same kind and character as those in which the plaintiff’s funds were invested. He and the plaintiff were cousins, and they had occasional interviews relative to the nature and character of the investments made for the plaintiff; and when the plaintiff was absent from the neighborhood where Mr. Stone resided they corresponded upon the same subject. Occasionally, at the house of the decedent, the securities belonging to *607the plaintiff were delivered to her for examination, and she generally retired with them to a room by herself, and made such memoranda concerning the same as she eared to make. Prior to November, 1873, the decedent had a safe in his house, in which he kept his own and the plaintiff’s securities. The plaintiff procured a tin box, for the purpose of keeping therein securities and papers belonging to herself, which was deposited in the safe unlocked. The municipal and school bonds, in which a large portion of the funds was at one time invested, were payable to bearer, with coupon bonds attached. It was conclusively established on the trial, by evidence independent of that given by the plaintiff, that Mr. Stone, at the time of his death, had a large amount of securities in his possession belonging to the plaintiff, and that there was a safe in bis house, and that there was a tin box in which securities and papers were kept belonging to the plaintiff, and that was deposited in the safe for safe-keeping. From the time that Mr. Stone began to act as the agent of the plaintiff in caring for her moneys, and until April 1,1868, no investments had been made in western securities; and on that day he delivered to her a memorandum in writing, in the nature of a receipt, giving a list of the securities which he then held, which amounted to the sum of $32,192.97. The referee accepted that statement as being entirely accurate, as showing the amount of the securities in the hands of the decedent on that day; and it is admitted that all of them were good and collectible, some eighteen or twenty thousand dollars of them being in government securities, worth on the market more than their par value. Subsequent to that time the parties never together looked over their matters for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of funds in the hands of Stone, or how the same was invested; nor did the decedent keep a continuous account from that time onward, nor had he before, of the use made of the plaintiff’s funds, nor the income derived therefrom, or the losses sustained, so that the moneys remaining in his hands could be readily and definitely ascertained. In November, 1873, the plaintiff went to the state of Wisconsin, and resided with friends until 1878, when she returned to this state. She testified, in substance, that on the 5th day of November, 1873, she visited the house of the decedent, and called for the tin box containing her securities, and received the same from the hands of Mr. Stone, and took the same into a room in the house, and by herself opened the box, made a list of the securities, and that they amounted in the aggregate to the sum of $52,000; describing each bond, and giving the amount thereof. This is the evidence claimed to be incompetent, to which the defendant objected; and the same was overruled, and an exception was taken. Afterwards a motion was made to strike the same from the record on the ground that it was incompetent under section 829 of the Code; and the referee denied the motion, and the defendant excepted. We quote part of her evidence as the same is printed in the case, viz.: “I never discovered any other papers in the box except my own. I went to Wisconsin in November, 1873. I had been living through the summer at Corfu. Before going to Wisconsin, I came to my brother’s, and I went and asked Mr. Stone to let me take the box,—let me look the bonds over; that I am going west. On that occasion he let me take the box, and I went in a room by myself, and looked through the papers,—in the nursery, I think, alone. I opened the box there, and examined the papers. I have got that list now. (Witness refers to a list of securities in the box, testified to by her on a former hearing, which evidence has been stricken out.) I have had the list in my possession ever since I made it. I think Frank Stone had it a short time. Question. Are you able to state from memory what securities were contained in the box at the time you examined it? Answer. I could not state exactly. Q. Can you by looking at the list? A. lean. Q. Will you take it and state? * * * Q. State now, Mrs. Doolittle, what bonds you found in the box on that occasion, when you examined them, in November, 1873. (This was objected to by the defendant on the ground that the witness was incompetent *608under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The objection was overruled by the referee, to which ruling the defendant duly excepted.) A. November 15, 1873. That was the date I left Livonia for Wisconsin. It was before this I took the list. I was preparing to go home with my brother and sister; and, in order to prepare for it, I came and took the list. They came and made me a short visit, and on the 15th of November I went to Wiscon-. sin. The bonds were, (here follows a list of the securities as stated by the witness.) Q. Is that all the bonds you found in the box on that occasion? A. No, sir. I found North Carolina bonds. I found the Erie bonds, $1,000. The North Carolina bond was $1,000. The Erie was 7 per cent., and the North Carolina 6 per cent. In making this list, I compared the list with the bonds. I looked them over a number of times. Q. What did you do with the bonds ? A. I put them into the box, and carried them into the dining-room, where Stone was. (The defendant objected to what the witness did, on the same ground as before. Overruled, and exception taken.) Q. What did you do with the box after taking it into the room where Mr. Stone was? (Same objection as before, and same rulings.) A. I handed it to him; and he took it, and put it into this safe. On several occasions I had this box, and looked over the papers. I was away a good deal, and when I came back I would want to see what had been done during my absence. After examining the papers in the box,- on these occasions, I always returned the papers into the box again. I never carried any of the papers away. I sometimes cut off coupons from the bonds, and after cutting them off I handed them back to him. Previous to Joel Stone’s death, I never took that box away from his house. I never took any of the securities that were contained in that box away from his house previous to his death. Q. After you examined the box, and made the list from it which you have testified to, did you find in the box, at that time, any United States bonds? (Objected to by defendant on the same ground as before. Same ruling, and exception by defendant.) A. No, sir. Q. Any Monroe county bonds? (Same objection. Same ruling, and exception.) A. No, sir.” In the list made in 1868, already referred to, there were United States and Monroe county bonds amounting in the aggregate to $25,000. Nothing could be plainer than that. This evidence related both to a transaction and a conversation between the decedent and the witness, and should be condemned as incompetent, under the provisions of section 829, which declares; “Upon the trial of an action, * * * a party or person interested in the event * * * shall not be examined as a witness in his own behalf or interest, * * * against * * * a person deriving his title or interest from, through, or under a deceased person, by assignment or otherwise, concerning a personal transaction or communication between the witness and the deceased person.” The policy of the statute is to exclude the evidence of an interested witness concerning any transaction between himself and the deceased person, concerning a matter in dispute, which, if decided in favor of the witness, or those wtio claim under him, would diminish the estate of the deceased person. The facts that the witness received from the hands of the deceased the tin box, and that she examined the contents, and then handed it back to him, and that it was at once placed in the safe, standing alone, were qui,te unimportant, for the reason that it proved nothing which could have been used by the referee as evidence in ascertaining the amount of funds and securities in the hands of the deceased belonging to the plaintiff at the time of his death. The essential and material part of the evidence was in the statement made by the plaintiff, that the box contained securities belonging to her, of which she gave a list, and stated the aggregate amount of the same. The whole transaction, together with the conversation, was, in substance and effect, a request by the plaintiff, made to Mr. Stone personally, that he should hand to her the securities which he held in his hands belonging to her, and that he complied therewith, and placed in her hands the bonds *609of which she made a list, and that she returned the same to his custody, and that he received the same as her agent, to be accounted for. In short, the evidence, if true, was an admission by Mr. Stone, made to the plaintiff, that he then held in his hands certain bonds, which were in the box, and they belonged to the plaintiff, and were purchased with her funds. After the repeated interpretations which have been given to this section of the Code by the courts, as to the policy and meaning of the statute, we need not cite any authority in support of our conclusion that the evidence was wholly incompetent. To disregard the exception taken to this evidence would be to deprive those who are interested in the estate of the decedent of the protection which the statute intended to give them.
The relevancy of the evidence upon one of the most important findings of fact made by the referee is readily observed on reading the series of findings set forth in his report, in which the large sum found to be in the hands of the deceased at the time of his death is founded. The decedent did not keep a full and intelligent account showing the sums of money in his hands belonging to the plaintiff while acting as her agent; and in consequence of this omission of duty on his part all the disputes, controversies, and uncertainty as to the amount thereof arise. The referee has found as a fact that Mr. Stone, from 1878 to the time of his death, mingled the plaintiff’s money and property with his own, without her knowledge or consent, and that for a greater portion of the time, prior to October 25, 1878, he kept the plaintiff’s moneys and securities in his hands, separate from his own, and whenever the same was mingled with his own it was with the plaintiff’s knowledge and consent, and that all the Western bonds purchased by the said Joel Stone with moneys belonging to the plaintiff were coupon bonds, payable to bearer, all bearing interest at 10 per cent, per annum. For the purpose of stating an account, so far as one could be stated from evidence, the referee sought to-ascertain the amount of funds in the hands of the trustee on the 1st day of January, 1875, and the kind of securities in which the same was invested; and he found the amount to be $58,052.48, and gave a list of the securities, which did not include any of the securities embraced in the memorandum of 1868, but did include most of the bonds which the plaintiff testified were in the tin box Hovember 15, 1873, which was only one year and six weeks-after the time when the plaintiff testified that she inspected the contents of the box for the purpose and in the manner stated in her evidence. It was thus made manifest that the incompetent evidence was relied upon by the referee to aid him in ascertaining the amount of funds in the hands of the-decedent January 1, 1875. We are forced to believe that the referee relied upon this evidence in arriving at that result. In his written opinion, which accompanied his report and is printed in the case, he discussed the question as to the amount of funds actually in the hands of the trustee January 1, 1875, and states the evidence which guided him in fixing the amount, and referred to the list of securities made by the plaintiff November 15, 1873, as being at that time in the tin box, as testified to by the plaintiff. The learned counsel for the plaintiff has made a careful and elaborate argument, contending that the referee was sustained in his conclusions, without considering or giving any weight to the incompetent evidence giv.en by'the plaintiff in her own behalf. We do not have to consider the question that the same result might have been reached without the aid of that evidence. It is enough to say, in sustaining the exception, that upon all the evidence in the record— and, we may add, including the plaintiff’s own evidence on that subject—it is not conclusively established that the referee was entirely correct in that finding. He makes a statement to that effect in his opinion. At the same time that Mr. Stone was investing the plaintiff’s funds in Western securities he was also investing his own funds in the same class of securities. Between November, 1873, and January 1, 1875, the deceased made a list of the securi*610Mes in a book kept by himself, which was given in evidence by the plaintiff, upon which reliance is placed by the counsel for the plaintiff in support o£ the referee’s finding. But those entries are inconclusive against the defendant; for it was contended by the defendant that this list included securities belonging to the deceased, and purchased with his own funds, and for himself. It may be argued that the defendant’s contention was fallacious, but it cannot 3>e asserted by the court that the plaintiff’s position was conclusively established. The accuracy of the referee’s finding as to the amount due from the •estate of the trustee to the plaintiff rests mainly on the single finding of fact as to the amount due January 1, 1875. If there is error in reaching the amount due at that time, making the amount too great, then the result based thereon must be necessarily erroneous, and the judgment should be set aside; for the wrong done the defendant is such that it cannot be corrected by any attempt by this court to modify the judgment.
We are unable to see error in the ruling rejecting the defendant’s offer to read in evidence the entries made by the decedent in a book kept by him, called “Exhibit No. 5,” between June, 1883, and March 10, 1885, under the caption, “Cash-Book Kept for Mrs. Doolittle.” It was not kept in the same book as the one the plaintiff gave in evidence against the defendant, nor during the same period of time, nor was it a continuation of that account, nor was any reference made in either account to the other. 'As we understand ■the case, the ruling was no violation of the rule of evidence that when a part of an account or writing is put in evidence against a party the latter has a right to have in evidence all or so much of the account or writing as relates to or modifies the part read in evidence. As there must be a new trial for ■the reasons stated, we have not examined the question raised by the ruling, that tile deceased forfeited all claims for commission or compensation because of his failure to keep an account of his dealings with the funds of his principal, and because he mingled the plaintiff’s funds with his. Whether an agent •or trustee for another has forfeited all claims for compensation or commissions because of a breach or neglect of duty on his part, depends upon the facts and circumstances attending each case as it arises. It cannot be profitable to the parties for us to discuss that question on the evidence contained in this record. We have no hesitancy, for the reasons which we have stated, in ordering a new trial before another referee, with costs to the appellant to abide the final award of costs. All concur.