Opinion
December 10, 1964
Appeal from the Ontario Trial Term.
Present — Williams, P.J., Goldman, Henry, Noonan and Del Vecchio, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously reversed on the law and facts and in the interest of justice, with costs, and a new trial granted. Memorandum: During the course of the trial the defendant's attorney called Mr. Levy, plaintiff's attorney, to the stand and cross-examined him about the name of a person whom the defendant's attorney claimed was a witness to this accident. The plaintiff's attorney said that he did not know the name of such a witness, but he had heard that there was one. The defendant's attorney then, without foundation, assumed that there was such a witness and made it appear to the jury that the plaintiff's attorney was deliberately withholding the name of the witness. A Mr. Short, an insurance adjuster, was brought into the examination and Mr. Levy was asked if he or his client would authorize Short to furnish the name of any witness to this accident that he might know of. The record does not establish that there was such a witness, or, if there was, that the plaintiff's attorney knew his name. The examination itself and the manner in which it was conducted was highly improper and unfairly suggestive of evasive conduct by Mr. Levy. There was an effort to impugn the attitude of Mr. Levy as one of improper concealment under oath. We find that the calling of the witness, the examination itself, and the implications created thereby were so highly prejudicial as to require reversal and a new trial.