It appears that the first count in the complaint was brought to recover the amount of certain deposits made by the plaintiff, prior to the death of Mr. G. S. Parsons, with the private banking-house of G. S. Parsons Company. The court instructed the jury that inasmuch as the defendant was a married woman, married before 1877, and had never entered into any contract for the application to her or to her property of the provisions of the Public Act of that year relating to the property rights of married women, the law was so that, under the averments of that count and the evidence, she could not be held liable for the amounts sought to be recovered. We think this instruction was correct.Freeman's Appeal, 68 Conn. 533, 538; Kilbourn v.Brown, 56 id. 149; National Bank of New Eng. v. Smith, 43 id. 327; Smith v. Williams, ibid. 409; Way v. Peck, 47 id. 23. See also Buckingham v. Moss, 40 Conn. 461; Langenbach v. Schell, ibid. 224; Donovan's Appeal, 41 id. 551; Hitchcock v. Kiely, ibid. 611; Gore v. Carl, 47 id. 291, 292. These authorities also show that the bond signed by the defendant, as surety for her husband, to save harmless the estate of Israel Holmes, was void as to her.
The second count was framed to recover from the defendant the amount of certain deposits made by the plaintiff with the same banking-house after the death of Mr. Parsons on October 11th, 1898, and before the 2d day of November of that year — the date when the receivers were appointed.
The court instructed the jury, among other things, as follows: "The primary question under the second count, aside from the question of the amount due, is a question of fact, whether Mrs. Parsons after her husband's death was conducting that business through herself or her agent. . . . Upon Mr. Parsons' death all restrictions upon Mrs. Parsons' control of her property, her right to contract and enter into a partnership, passed away; she was therefore as free from control as any adult. Thereafter, if she by herself or her agent conducted the business of G. S. Parsons Company, and during such conduct the plaintiff deposited money as alleged, which was not repaid, the defendant is liable therefore. It is a question *Page 702 of fact, dependent upon whether Mrs. Parsons by herself or her agent was conducting the business after her husband's death, and during her conduct the deposits were made which under the second count the plaintiff seeks to recover."
The plaintiff, as a part of its case in chief, offered the said bond given to the estate of Israel Holmes, by which it was agreed to save said estate harmless. Upon objection this was excluded, together with all evidence relating to its execution and delivery. After that ruling the existence of such a bond, its execution as well as its terms, were not in the case. All such facts were, after that, irrelevant to the issue then being tried. At a later stage of the trial the defendant offered as a part of her case her own deposition, in which she had been asked in chief: "Whether or not you signed any paper or papers at any time relating to the heirs of the estate of Israel Holmes, or relating to the banking business of Holmes Parsons?" She answered: "I do not recollect that I did." Upon cross-examination she was asked, in the same deposition: "At or about the time your husband asked you to let him use your name, did you sign any bond with your husband to the Holmes' estate, or the Holmes' executors, promising to save them from all liability of Holmes Parsons?" She answered: "I have no recollection of it." This cross-examination was continued to some length. The substance of it was that the witness did not recollect any such bond and was unable to state positively that she did not. Upon rebuttal the plaintiffs offered said bond in evidence, to which the defendant objected, on the ground that it was immaterial and improper, and did not tend to contradict any statement of the defendant. The court admitted it in rebuttal, in contradiction of the defendant's statements. The defendant objected.
We think this was error. The existence of the bond was a fact irrelevant to the issues then being tried. A witness may not be contradicted as to any answer he may have made in respect to an irrelevant fact. 1 Greenl. on Ev. § 449. The case most frequently cited on the rule is, perhaps, Crowley v. Page, 7 Car. P. 789, 792. In that case Baron Parke in giving the judgment said: "If the witness, on cross-examination, *Page 703 admits the statement imputed to him, there is no necessity of giving other evidence of it; but if he says he does not recollect, that is not an admission, and you may give evidence on the other side to prove that the witness did say what is imputed, always supposing the statement to be relevantto the matter at issue." Harrington v. Lincoln, 2 Gray, 133;Nute v. Nute, 41 N. H. 60; Colwell v. Warner, 36 Conn. 224;White v. Griffing, 44 id. 437, 448; State v. Smith, 49 id. 376, 380. Besides, the bond, as against the defendant, was wholly void, and whether she remembered it or did not remember it, was an utterly indifferent matter.
Even upon the theory on which the court admitted this bond, we think there was error. The bond was admitted only for the purpose of affecting the credibility of the defendant. But the jury was not instructed in respect to this. So far as they knew the bond went into the case generally, as a part of the evidence. They had no direction that they were to receive this bond and to consider it only for the purpose of contradicting the defendant. So far as they were informed this bond was in the case as fully as if it had been admitted when first offered by the plaintiff.
The plaintiff called as a witness a Mr. Steadman, who had been the head clerk for G. S. Parsons Company and who, with the other clerks, carried on the business after Mr. Parsons' death. He was examined at length. The plaintiff also called as a witness William B. Merriman. He was the son-in-law of the defendant, having married her only child, and lived with her (the defendant) and was administrator with her on her husband's estate. He was examined at some length. The defendant also called the said Merriman as a witness for her. He was asked, on his examination in chief, by her: "Q. Did you at any time after Mr. Parsons' death give any instructions or directions to Mr. Steadman with reference to carrying on the business in behalf of Mrs. Parsons? A. No, sir. Q. Did you within that time give him any directions in regard to carrying on the business at all? A. I don't remember now." On rebuttal the plaintiff called Mr. Steadman and inquired of him as follows: "Q. Mr. Merriman states *Page 704 that he didn't give you any instructions as to the conduct of the business of that bank, a day or two after Mr. Guernsey S. Parsons' funeral. What do you say on that point?" Objected to because the inquiry was a part of plaintiff's case in chief, and was not rebuttal. The question was admitted to contradict Mr. Merriman, and for the purpose of affecting his credibility. Exception by defendant. "A. Mr. Merriman said: `Let the business continue as it is for the present.' Q. When did he say that? A. I should say it was the Monday following Mr. Parsons' funeral."
Assuming that Mr. Merriman was the agent of the defendant, if, after the death of Mr. Parsons, he gave any directions regarding the conduct of that banking business, it was a very significant fact for the plaintiff to prove as a part of its case in chief. It was a part of its case in the opening. It was not in any sense a fact in rebuttal. Hathaway v. Hemingway,20 Conn. 191; Belden v. Allen, 61 id. 173; Strong v. Smith, 62 id. 39, 42. As a fact in chief it was clearly inadmissible at that time, unless the court, in the exercise of its discretion, permitted it to be then proved. The court did not undertake to exercise its discretion. If this fact was admissible for the purpose of contradicting Mr. Merriman, it was the duty of the court to instruct the jury clearly as to the use that might be made of it. As it stood before the jury it was evidence proving affirmatively that Mr. Merriman did give such directions as Mr. Steadman stated. It was a manifest error in the court to leave it in that way. Smith v. Phipps,65 Conn. 302.
After the death of Mr. Parsons, Mr. Merriman found that a Mr. Hurlburt was indebted to him for overdrafts, made during the life of Mr. Parsons, amounting to $18,600. He procured from Mr. Hurlburt a note for that amount, payable to G. S. Parsons Company, and later a note for that amount payable to the defendant and secured by a mortgage of several pieces of land in Waterbury. This note and the mortgage were dated the 31st day of October, 1898. Receivers of G. S. Parsons Company were appointed by the Superior Court on the 2d day of November, 1898. It appeared that the defendant *Page 705 had no knowledge of the indebtedness of Mr. Hurlburt, of the giving by him of the notes and the mortgage, until the 13th day of January, 1899, when it was brought to her attention by her own counsel — Stephen W. Kellogg — and that then she immediately quitclaimed the same to the receivers of G. S. Parsons Company. As a part of their case in chief the plaintiff offered in evidence these several papers, i. e. the note and mortgage of Mr. Hurlburt and the quitclaim of the defendant. These were objected to by the defendant. The court admitted them to prove the allegations of the second count.
In the absence of proof that Merriman was acting with her knowledge as her agent in the matter, or that she had knowledge of the transaction prior to January 13th, 1899, we think this was error.
One of the reasons of appeal is that the court erred in its examination of the witness Merriman, and in the form and substance of its examination. The examination by the court is set forth at length in the statement of the case. In considering that examination in reference to the reasons of appeal, there are certain features of the case which should be borne in mind. It was a civil case, in which it was the duty of the court to hold the scale with a perfectly even beam. The only thing in dispute was a sum of money — whether or not such portion of the deposits which the plaintiff claimed to have made with the private banking-house of G. S. Parsons Company as should not be paid by the receivers of that concern, should be lost by the plaintiff or should be repaid to them by the defendant. The plaintiff could not compel the defendant to make good to it such deficiency unless it established, to the satisfaction of the jury, that the defendant was, after the death of her husband, conducting the said banking business through herself or her agent. It seems to be pretty well established that the defendant was, by the death of her husband, greatly broken and prostrated. She was wholly unable to attend personally to any business, and was to a great degree incapacitated from even talking about business. There was no claim of any agent acting for her other than the said *Page 706 Merriman. The defendant had testified that Merriman was not her agent in any respect in the banking business. Merriman had denied that he was such an agent. The whole case then turned on the credit which the jury should give to Merriman. If they believed him, then their verdict could not possibly be for the plaintiff. If they disbelieved him, then their verdict might be in favor of the plaintiff. Merriman was first brought into the case as a witness by the plaintiff. By so doing it in a general sense vouched for his good character. Both parties in this case were represented in court by able and experienced counsel. Merriman, being a witness whose interests might be supposed to be adverse to the plaintiff, was subjected in chief to an examination by plaintiff's counsel very like a cross-examination. This, as appears, was by the permission of the court, and was proper so far as we can see. Afterwards Merriman was called as a witness by the defendant and testified in chief in her behalf. He was then subjected to a very long, searching, rigorous and critical cross-examination by the plaintiff's counsel. By this cross-examination the characteristics, the willingness, the intelligence, and the reticence of the witness, were pretty fully shown. It was after all this that the court undertook the examination of the witness, of which complaint is made. In this examination the questions by the court were very generally in the form of cross-examination questions. The judge seems to have taken the witness in charge and to have fallen into the form of cross-examining counsel. The comments made upon the replies of the witness seem to have the style of censure and upbraiding. The whole indicates, with painful distinctness, that the judge regarded the witness as unworthy of belief; and all this in the presence of the jury. It is undoubtedly within the authority of a trial judge to ask a question, or repeated questions, of a witness. Sometimes this might be desirable to call out some fact which the jury ought to know; and such judge may, perhaps, indicate his opinion as to the credibility of the evidence, so long as he leaves the question open to the jury. The credibility of any witness as to the weight to be given to his testimony, is a *Page 707 matter wholly within the province of the jury. Any conduct by a trial judge in the examination of a witness which in effect imposes upon the jury his own belief as to the credibility of that witness, is not justifiable. Such conduct would be a departure by the judge from his own proper sphere and an invasion of the province of the jury.
We are also of the opinion that having asked these questions in the manner as shown, the judge should have carefully instructed the jury that any indication of his own opinion as to the credibility of Mr. Merriman was not binding on them. Nothing of that kind was said. There was manifest error.
In the case of McMinn v. Whelan, 27 Cal. 300, 319, the court said: "From the high and authoritative position of a judge presiding at a trial before a jury, his influence with them is of vast extent, and he has it in his power by words or actions, or both, to materially prejudice the rights and interests of one or the other of the parties. By words or conduct he may on the one hand support the character or testimony of a witness, or on the other of the parties. By words or conduct he may on the one hand support the character or testimony of a witness, or on the other may destroy the same, in the estimation of the jury; and thus his personal and official influence is exerted to the unfair advantage of one of the parties, with the corresponding detriment to the cause of the other."
There is error and a new trial is granted.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.