Summary
In Hanrahan v. New York Edison Co. (238 N.Y. 194) the Court of Appeals said: "But `it is fair to judge a party by his own witness. If a party puts upon the stand a witness who is for any reason assailable, that party asserts or admits the credibility of that witness.' (FOLGER, J., in Pollock v. Pollock, 71 N.Y. 137, 152.)
Summary of this case from Goodwin v. Amtorg Trading Corp.Opinion
Argued April 8, 1924
Decided May 13, 1924
James J. Mahoney and George J. Stacy for appellant. Benjamin W. Moore, Leonard F. Fish and Thomas J. O'Neill for respondent.
Plaintiff sued to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him. While riding on a bicycle he was struck by a Ford delivery car negligently driven. Plaintiff's theory of the case was that the car which hit him was driven by Cornelius Gleason and that Gleason was at the time of the accident an employee of defendant, acting in defendant's business. Gleason denied that the accident occurred. Defendant took the position that in any event Gleason was an employee of an independent contractor for whose acts it was not liable. ( Wagner v. Motor Truck Renting Corp., 234 N.Y. 31.)
The verdict of the jury was for plaintiff. On appeal the Appellate Division reduced the judgment entered thereon, and unanimously affirmed the judgment as modified. The unanimous decision of the Appellate Division that there was evidence supporting the verdict precludes this court from considering the points chiefly urged on the appeal, that the negligence of the defendant was not established by the evidence, and that it was error to submit the question to the jury. (N.Y. Const. art. 6, § 9.)
Two rulings of the trial court, of sufficient importance to call for consideration, do, however, survive unanimous affirmance. We are permitted to read the evidence to determine whether, if the rulings are erroneous, they amount to substantial error. First, Cornelius Gleason, first called by the plaintiff, testified that on the night of the accident he was driving a commercial Ford automobile; that he had in the car one Purtle, an inspector for the defendant, and that he drove the car under Purtle's direction over a certain route for the purpose of replacing electric lights wherever they were out. Gleason was afterwards called as a witness for defendant and testified that he did not have an accident — a collision with a boy on a bicycle — on the night in question. He also testified that he was employed and paid by one Cotter and not by the defendant; that Cotter paid him six dollars the night for himself and car to take the defendant's inspector over his route.
On cross-examination by plaintiff the witness was allowed over defendant's general objection to testify that he had been convicted in the Court of Special Sessions of the crime of striking plaintiff with his automobile and going away from the scene of the accident without reporting it, as required by law.
Gleason had given material and damaging evidence against plaintiff and the evidence of his conviction tended to impair his credibility. It was competent for that purpose and for no other purpose. But "it is fair to judge a party by his own witness. If a party puts upon the stand a witness who is for any reason assailable, that party asserts or admits the credibility of that witness." (FOLGER, J., in Pollock v. Pollock, 71 N.Y. 137, 152.) Plaintiff called Gleason as his witness. He was thereby precluded from impeaching his credit by general evidence of bad character although defendant afterwards called him as its witness on another branch of the case. The party who first calls a witness cannot be allowed to say or show that he was unworthy of credit by impeaching his general credibility when he is afterwards called by the other side. This is an ancient rule in New York ( Jackson v. Varick, 7 Cow. 238, 242; affd., 2 Wend. 166, 205) and has recently been reiterated by this court. "He (plaintiff) first called Graham as a witness and relied on him to give substantial evidence necessary to establish his cause of action. By doing this he in effect vouched for his reliability and credibility, and thereafter, even though he was called by the other side, he could not give evidence to impeach him." (HISCOCK, J., in Carlisle v. Norris, 215 N.Y. 400, 409.) While it may be urged with some degree of force that a party does not by calling a witness upon one point vouch for him on every point without knowing what he may say when the adverse party calls him, it logically follows that one should not be permitted to say in one breath, "the witness speaks truthfully for me and, by reason of his bad character, is not to be believed when he testifies against me."
Secondly, plaintiff, as a part of his principal case, called Mullins, a probation officer, who testified, over proper objection and exception, that he asked one Chisholm, the superintendent of defendant, whether Gleason was in the employ of the defendant at the time of the accident and Chisholm said that Gleason had been in the employ of defendant for about two years. This statement, he said, was made in a casual conversation while Mullins was "investigating" Gleason. Chisholm's admissions were competent only as they were made concerning and while engaged in a transaction in which he was the authorized agent of the corporation. They were no part of the transaction in suit, which was plaintiff's accident. He did not in any sense represent the corporation in giving information to the probation officer as to the history of Gleason. No real or apparent authority to give such information was shown. The declaration of an agent of a corporation is not evidence against his principal, except when made in the course of his agency or in the discharge of his official duties. ( Cobb v. United Engineering C. Co., 191 N.Y. 475, 480.) Chisholm, when called as a witness by the defense, not only denied that he made the statement to Mullins but also testified that Gleason was not in the employ of the defendant at the time of the accident, but was in the employ of Cotter. The question whose employee Gleason was goes to the heart of this controversy.
These rulings were erroneous but we are admonished by the Civil Practice Act, section 106, and it is our practice, to disregard an error in a ruling of the trial court if a substantial right of a party is not affected. Defendant had a substantial right to require plaintiff to make out his case, first, by evidence sufficient to take the case to the jury, and secondly, by a fair preponderance of legal evidence. Substantial justice, which is the practical end to be sought for, would not otherwise result. We should get down to the merits of the case and ignore mere technical error. But these errors were more than formal irregularities. The issues were sharply litigated. By incompetent evidence, Gleason was shown unworthy of belief when he swore that he did not collide with plaintiff on the night of the accident and that he was not in the employ of defendant. By incompetent evidence, defendant's liability as the employer of Gleason was in part, at least, established.
Plaintiff's evidence as to whose employee Gleason was was largely circumstantial. The sufficiency and weight of such evidence depended largely on the elimination of the direct evidence of defendant's interested witnesses as to the nature of such employment. The plaintiff's case was not so clearly made out without the improper evidence that it can be said that defendant's liability was established by a fair preponderance of the remaining evidence. It cannot be said with assurance that substantial justice was done when the case was sent to the jury.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CARDOZO, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur.
Judgments reversed, etc.