(dissenting) :
The defendants claim, by way of counter-claim, that they loaned the firm of Klock & Walratb $200.. Walratb is dead ; and tbo plaintiff is tbe survivor of the firm and has taken the property and agreed to pay tbe debts.
To prove that tbe defendants loaned their money to the firm, they called one Ackerman, who testified, under objection, that Walrath told him that he got the money from the defendants, and that ho wanted it for the firm of Klock & Walrath. Tbe question is whether this evidence is admissible against Klock.
These admissions are no part of the res gestae. Of course, whatever Walrath said to the defendants, when he borrowed the money, would be admissible. Because they would have been justified in relying upon statements made at the time. And, if the transaction wore one within what might be presumed to be the scope oí the partnership business, the statements of Walrath made to the other party to the transaction would have been evidence against the co-partner.
So, too, when the transaction has been shown to be a partnership affair by competent evidence, then it may be that the admissions of one partner in respect thereto are admissible against his co-partner. But the question here is very different. It is whether the unsworn admissions of one partner now deceased, not a part of the res gestae, are admissible against the other to prove that a certain transaction is not the private business of the one who transacted it, but is partnership business.
Now, it is plain that the unsworn admissions of A. that he is a partner of B. are no evidence of the partnership against B, If, then, an admission of the existence of a partnership is no evidence of the partnership as against another person, how can an admission that a particular transaction is partnership business bo evidence against such other person ?
The former is an admission that the two persons are partners in several matters ; the latter is an admission that they are partners in a single matter.
If A. and B. are partners, A. may transact private business. In regard to such private business his admissions are not evidence, against B., so as to make B. chargeable for A’s private business by *505mere unsworn admissions, which formed no part of thé res gestes. Tbe point in dispute is whether the transaction was, or was not, partnership business; not whether, if it be partnership business, the admissions of one partner would then be evidence as against the other.
Unsworn admissions are received on the general ground that they are against the interest of the party making them ; and hence, may be supposed to b„e true. But an unsworn admission by A. that a certain transaction, conducted by him and imposing a liability upon him, was really done in behalf of A. and B., and that B. is jointly liable with him, is not against A.’s interest, but rather in his favor. In the present case, Walrath alone did the act of borrowing. Klock is made liable because Walrath who' is now dead told somebody that he borrowed for Klock and himself. This is the merest «hearsay evidence, condemned by every sound principle of law.
Partners are general agents of the firm. (Chemung Canal Bank v. Bradner, 44 N. Y., 686 ; Coll. Part., sec. 195.) It is as such that their admissions bind other partners. But the admissions of agents are not admissible against their principals, unless they are made at the time when the agent is transacting the business of the principal,' and are connected with that business. (White v. Miller, 71 N. Y.. 118; Anderson v. Rome and O. R. R. Co., 54 id., 340.)
The cases cited by the plaintiff do not sustain his position.
Whitaker v. Brown (16 Wend., 505) was a case where the declarations admitted in evidence formed a part of the transaction.
Walden v. Sherburne (15 Johns., 409) was a case where original entries made in a book of account by the partner who conducted the business were admitted, after the other partner had produced an account current against him.
G-ueeNLeaf says : “ The act or declaration of each member in furtherance of the common object is the act of all.” (1 Greenl. Evid., § 112.) And again: “If the parties have a joint interest, an admission made by one is in general evidence against all.” (Section 174.) But the question in the present case is whether Klock & Walrath had a joint interest in the transaction in question.
I think this question has been decided adversely to the plaintiff *506by the Court of Appeals in Williams v. Manning (41 How., 454), although the facts are uot quite clear. An action was brought against the representative of a deceased partner for services alleged to have been rendered to the firm. On the trial letters of the surviving partners were admitted in evidence. The court held that this was error.
Again, in Van Keuren v. Parmelee (2 N. Y., 528), Judge BkoNSON says that an admission “ can only affect the, party who makes it, unless he has authority to speak for others as well as himself. A joint debtor has no such authority.” A partner has no .authority to speak for his co-partners in anything but partnership matters. It is reasoning in a circle to say that a partner, by his admission, can turn his private business into partnership business, and then can bind -his partner by his admission because the matter is partnership business.
Of course, where two partners are sued the admissions of one are, at least, evidence against him and cannot be excluded. The present question, therefore, can arise only where the claim is against a survivor, or in some similar case.
I think the judgment and order should be reversed.
Present — LeabNed, P. J., Bocees and BoabdmaN, JJ.Judgment affirmed.