Blair v. Flack

O’BRIEN, J.

This action has been tried three'times, and reviewed once by this court, (62 Hun, 509, 17 N. Y. Supp. 64,) the opinion giving a full and explicit statement of the facts upon which the issues between the *755parties were formed. Since the appeal the pleadings have been amended; changing, to some extent, the issues. But as the principal issues were correctly defined in the former opinion, and the views therein expressed were availed of by the learned trial judge upon this last trial in such a way that no exception to his charge was taken, the only questions left upon this appeal are such as are presented by exceptions taken to the denial of the motions to dismiss the complaint, and to the admission or exclusion of certain evidence. A restatement of all the facts will not be required, because, by reference to the statement in the former opinion, and to so much of the facts as may be necessary to present the questions urged upon this appeal, we shall have sufficient data before us upon which to dispose of the case.'

The plaintiffs assert that, having attached property of their debtor, they agreed with the sheriff that the latter should accept as security for their claim, in lieu of the levy made, the money of one Adams, which being given, they consented to .release their lien upon the attached property. The appellant insists that, it was error to refuse to dismiss the complaint, because, assuming that the agreement under which the plaintiffs sought to recover was established, such an agreement, being without consideration, was void. We cannot see the slightest force or merit in this suggestion. The plaintiffs, upon their attachment, had procured a levy by the sheriff upon the property, which ostensibly belonged to the debtor. It was entirely competent for a third person, desiring to obtain, possession of the goods, whether under claim of ownership or not, to make a contract with the attaching creditors by which' he would obtain possession thereof; and the surrender of the rights which the creditors thus obtained under their attachment was a consideration sufficient to support the agreement on the part of the third person that he would, in place of the attached property, deposit a check with the sheriff as security for plaintiffs’ claim, and gave support to the sheriff’s agreement in favor of plaintiffs.

A more serious question relates to the admissibility of a copy of an affidavit alleged to have been made by the sheriff, and used by the latter upon a motion made in the city court upon an application to inter-plead the plaintiffs in a suit brought by Adams, who was the person who had deposited the check with the sheriff, and which affidavit contained admissions claimed by plaintiffs to be fatal to defendant’s defense. We do not think that any question is presented but that proof sufficient was offered to show the loss of the paper purporting to be an affidavit signed by the defendant, Flack, and used in the city court suit, and which was present in the court room on the former trial of this action. Nor is there any question but that such proof would have justified resort to secondary evidence as to the contents of the paper, assuming that-sufficient appeared to show that the original was signed by, or brought home to, the defendant, Flack, against whom it was to be read as his declaration. As said in Nichols v. Iron Co., 56 N. Y. 618, however:

“Secondary evidence of the contents of a written instrument, when allowed, does not obviate the necessity of proving the genuineness of the instrument, but *756renders it more imperative. Where secondary evidence of the contents of a writing is admissible, it is indispensable that the person by whom it is proposed to prove it should have seen and read the writing, and can speak from personal knowledge. There must he proof that the party either wrote it or authorized it to he written. ”

The question, therefore, is, was there proof that the affidavit, secondary evidence of the contents of which was read to the jury, was either written, or authorized to be written, by Flack? We will leave out of consideration, in this connection, any inference to be drawn from the admissibility oí a copy of the affidavit upon the former trial, and refer to so much of the record as directly bears upon the question of proof that the original affidavit was written, or authorized to be written, by Flack. The copy was produced by the attorney who appeared for Adams in the city court case in his litigation against the defendant, Flack. He testified that this copy of the affidavit was served upon him, as such attorney, by Flack, acting through his attorney. When asked as to his means of knowledge of - the identification of the copy with the original affidavit used by Flack upon the motion in the city court, he stated, in effect, that he knew it was a copy of the affidavit, because the original was submitted to the court on the motion, and 'referred to, and that the reference to the affidavit in the court showed that it was the same as the copy which the witness then had in his hand. It was also put beyond question that the attorney who presented the affidavit was the attorney for Flack, and that he read the affidavit purporting to be sworn to by Flack, and served the copy upon the witness which the latter produced in court, and which was admitted in evidence. We think, therefore, that where the loss of the original affidavit from the files of the city court was proved to the satisfaction of the trial court, and where the identity of the contents of the copy offered in evidence with the original appeared by the testimony of two witnesses, and the lost original paper was made a part of the proofs on a former trial, supplemented, as were these facts, by evidence to show that the original was served by Flack’s attorney, and used upon the motion in the city court, a sufficient foundation was laid for the admission of the copy as proof of the contents of the lost original.

The action in the city court was stated by counsel to have been one brought by the third party, Adams, against the sheriff, to recover back the amount of the check deposited with the sheriff. The appellant here contends that it was error for the court to exclude the judgment roll in that action, or evidence that the plaintiff had notice of such action, and had been requested to defend the same. It is true the record shows that the defendant offered in evidence the judgment roll in an action in the city court wherein Adams was plaintiff, and Flack defendant, and that thereupon a discussion between court and counsel was indulged in, as to the purposes for which such judgment roll was offered. It appears to have been marked for identification, but it forms no part of the present record, and is not, therefore, before the court. So we fail to see how any great consideration is to be given to this, because we are unable to determine what the character of that action was. We probably would be right in assuming that it was an action brought by Adams *757to recover back the money from the sheriff upon the theory that he had converted the same, but of this there is no proof in the record. Assuming, however, that it would have proven what the defendant’s counsel offered to show, we do not think that, sustaining by competent proof the offer thus made, it would have in any way affected the plaintiffs’ right to a recovery. If we may assume, as stated, that that action was brought against the sheriff for converting the money belonging to Adams, it can have little or no bearing upon the questions presented here, as to plaintiffs’ right to recover, which was based upon an agreement alleged to have be'en made by the plaintiffs in this action and the sheriff and Adams. It must be remembered that the plaintiffs were not parties to that record, nor were they privies, for both Adams and Fleck held towards them an antagonistic position. The plaintiffs here held towards the sheriff no relation as surety indemnitor, or bailor, and therefore the effect of a suit brought by a third person against the sheriff, relating, as it may be, to the same subject-matter, could in no way be controlling, even though notice thereof had been brought home to the plaintiffs. They were justified in standing upon the claim which they made, of an agreement with the sheriff by which he held a fund sufficient to pay any claim which they might have recovered against-the debtors; and we fail to see how a judgment, or notice of proceedings in an action resulting in a judgment, in favor of the third person, Adams, against the sheriff, for converting money belonging to Adams, could affect plaintiffs’ right to recover. We think it, however, sufficient to say that where, as here, the judgment is absent from the record, and the relevancy and materiality do not clearly appear, we cannot conclude that the trial judge, with the record before him, made any error which would demand a new trial.

As no other errors upon the trial were assigned or urged upon this appeal, we are of opinion that the judgment, should be affirmed, with costs and disbursements.