The defendant sets up as a defense an account stated, signed by the plaintiff as the administrator of Smith Barker deceased, which he avers was delivered to him and accepted and retained by him. The plaintiff replies that the account referred to was prepared at the request and with the assistance of the defendant for a specific purpose, namely, to induce Sylvanus Townsend to qualify as an executor and trustee of John Pentz, deceased; that the defendant dictated it; that it was not intended as a final settlement of the accounts between the estates, nor as an account stated, and that the defendant promised and agreed when the account was handed to him and as an inducement to the plaintiff to sign the certificate, that a full accounting should be had between the estates as soon as a trustee was appointed. It seems that Mr. Townsend refused to qualify “ unless he could see a statement or account made up as to how said estate of John Pentz stood with the said Smith Barker or his estate.” The reply contained no averment that the account thus signed was in any respect erroneous, but that it was made as stated upon the request of the defendant, and for a particular purpose. The complaint was dismissed and judgment rendered for the defendant on the pleadings. The learned justice at Special Term seems to have applied the principle in pari delicto potior est conditio defendeniis, because the plaintiff united with the defendant to deceive a third party, namely, Mr. Townsend, by making an account which was apparently, but not actually, an adjustment of the exist*287ing accounts between the estates. The account thus prepared does not seem to have accomplished the purpose, Mr. Townsend not having qualified, and it does not appear in what way Mr. Townsend would have been injured or the plaintiff benefited, if Mr. Townsend had qualified as it was desired he should. It must have been a matter of little moment to the plaintiff who was appointed trustee in the absence of any evidence of collusion, to obtain payment of the claim he urged against the estate of Pentz, and a matter of little consequence to the trustee what was the condition of the accounts between the estates, except the labor which might be required if they were marked by complications. It appears also, for such is the allegation in the reply, that the qualification of Mr. Townsend was the wish of the defendant, and to gratify which the account was made up. This design having been disclosed, it was wrong in the plaintiff to have assented to the proposition of the defendant, but it did not in fact do wrong to Mr. Townsend because he did not qualify, and the plaintiff is not seeking to obtain from the defendant any benefit or advantage from the arrangement made in reference to Mr. Townsend, or to urge any claim or demand which was not reserved between him and the defendant, when that arrangement was made. The claim, in other words, does not grow out of that transaction or any thing connected with it in any way. It is an independent demand, if it exist at all, in favor of the estate of an intestate, and therefore the maxim applied does not govern it. "When one of two wrong-doers seeks an advantage arising from, or the benefit of, the unlawful combination, the defendant’s attitude is the better one, and the maxim quoted applies, but this is not such a case. The plaintiff makes no demand upon it, and it furnishes him with no claim, benefit or advantage. It imposes upon him in fact the burden of showing that the account of which it was a part, was not intended for what it appears to be, and in that way in effect gives the defendant the better position in reference to it. If it was not given as an account stated, the accounts are still open, and if it was, under the forms of pleading adopted and the allegations made, the plaintiff is remediless in this action. The issue presented as to the character of the account should for the reasons assigned have been tried. The defendant was not entitled to judgment on the pleadings therefore, and the order granting it was erroneous.
*288The judgment must be reversed but without costs to the appellant.
Davis, P. J., and Daniels, J., concurred.Judgment reversed without costs.