Opinion
May, 1794.
Ridgely, for plaintiff, objected to this evidence. He stated several reasons for the rejection of this evidence. First, it was not such charge in a book as appears to have been contemplated by the legislature in the Act of Assembly, 1 Body Laws 347. It is not a charge for "goods, wares and merchandises sold and delivered," or any "other matter which is properly chargeable in an account." It is for money said to have been paid, and for which a receipt should have been given. Second, this entry in Joseph Draper's book appears to have been made many years, at least ten or twelve, after the payment is said to have been made. This then cannot be considered, as to this charge, a book regularly and fairly kept; it was not entered at the time, nor under the immediate impression and recollection of the transaction. The circumstance also of its being ordered and made when Joseph Draper was at the point of death, his mind occupied with other subjects, his attentions wandering, and his recollection imperfect, forms a fatal objection to the admission of this evidence. Third, the Act of Assembly which admits the book requires the evidence of the plaintiff or immediate party himself, and the rule ought not to be extended to include other cases and to admit other witnesses. It would be an inconvenient and dangerous precedent.
Peery, for defendant. The Act of Assembly contains nothing which necessarily or by construction will reject a charge for money lent, advanced or paid. The expressions, or "other matters which are properly chargeable in an account," seem to admit rather than reject it; besides, according to the construction now given, "goods, wares and merchandises" will include everything which was intended by the Act of Assembly, and the subsequent words are to go for nothing. The uniform practice and the public opinion has been in favor of such charges, Dall. 85. The length of time which elapsed previously to the entry being made cannot affect it, if the other requisite circumstances are found in the case. The oath of a third person, an uninterested individual, must certainly be better proof of a book than the party himself. Such power is extended by our Act of Assembly further than it was allowed in England, merely from the necessity of the case, because in this country business is frequently carried on by principals without clerks.
In the trial of the cause in support of the first plea, the defendant produced the book of Joseph Draper, and offered to swear Charles Draper as a witness in the cause to prove the book, and to give in evidence to the jury that a certain entry in the said book of the payment of £20 in discharge of so much of the said debt was made by himself, at the particular request of Joseph Draper, a little while before his death, and when in extremis.
The book nor the oath of the witness on this subject cannot be admitted.