
    Dietrich Merschendorf, Respondent, v. Paul Koch, Appellant.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    January, 1898.)
    Bills and notes — Consideration — Storage certificates for, whiskey deliverable in the future — Interested witness.
    A note, given in consideration of the delivery to the maker of certain certificates which state that a quantity of whiskey is kept by the payee on storage, subject to the order of the maker, upon the payment of the purchase price,, a government tax and certain charges; has a sufficient consideration; and the unsupported testimony of the maker, that the maturity of the note was to be deferred until he demanded possession of the whiskey,, need not be accepted by the court as he is ■ an interested party.
    Appeal from a judgment rendered by the justice of the First Judicial Distinct Court in favor of the plaintiff. Action upon a promissory note. "
    
      Leon Kronfeld, for respondent.
    W. W. Culver, for appellant.
   Bischoff, J.

The note in suit was given to the plaintiff by the defendant in return for the delivery to him of certain .certificates which expressed the fact that a quantity of whiskey was kept by the plaintiff, on storage, to the defendant’s order, the whiskey to be delivered upon payment'by the holder of the certificate of the stated purchase price and the tax imposed by the government, together with certain other charges.

The defendant set up an affirmative defense of an alleged oral agreement, contemporaneous with the delivery of the note, whereby the maturity" of the obligation was deferred to his demand for possession of the whiskey, and it was claimed that the defendant bad never demanded such possession. In support of this defense the defendant alone gave testimony, and upon this appeal it is contended that the justice should have found favorably to the defense upon this evidence because not expressly contradicted, or that, in any event, judgment should have been rendered for the defendant upon the ground that there was an absence of consideration for the note.

The presence of consideration amply appears, however, from the fact that the plaintiff bound himself to keep the stated quantity of whiskey ready for delivery upon the defendant’s demand, and it is reasonably to be inferred from the plaintiff’s eAddence that the note in suit was given to secure the defendant’s payment, under the contract, before the date of maturity.

That delivery of the whiskey was to precede the payment of the price was á proposition opposed to the terms of the agreement, as expressed in the certificate, and the only evidence that such was the" condition of payment is found in the uncorroborated testimony of the defendant himself, which testimony, if other-wise available, being that of an interested "witness, was by no means conclusive upon the justice sitting as trier of the fact. Levy v. Yazbeck, 22 Misc. Rep. 136.

The judgment must be affirmed, Avith costs.

Daly, P. J., and McAdam, J., concur.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.  