
    Harold Weiss and David Ritter, copartners, trading as the Ideal Button Co., Respondents, v. Isaac L. Meyer, Appellant.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department,
    May, 1916.)
    Goods sold and delivered — action for — evidence insufficient to establish delivery — Code Civ. Pro. § 829.
    In an action for goods sold and delivered, proof that they were packed in boxes by plaintiff who rendered a correct bill therefor and, upon sending the boxes back by the delivery boy to defendant with the original bills and the order slip, received receipts initialed by defendant’s clerk and checked by her but only as to prices, is insufficient to establish delivery of the goods.
    In such action testimony of plaintiff as to conversations with defendant’s deceased partner bearing on the question of the value of the goods is inadmissible under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
    Appeal'by defendant from a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, first district, after a trial -by a judge without a jury.
    Sam L. Cohen, for appellant.
    Alexander Wolf (Maxwell M. Schenkel, of counsel), for respondents. ■ •
   Bijur, J..

Plaintiffs sued for goods sold and delivered. The answer, in addition to denials, sets up a fraudulent scheme to deceive defendant as to the amount of the deliveries. Plaintiffs were ' button makers and defendant a manufacturer of ladies’ coats.

Appellant contends that plaintiffs failed to prove delivery; failed to prove the agreed purchase price; that there was error in the admission of evidence of one of the plaintiffs as to his conversations with defendant’s deceased partner; that there was error in excluding defendant’s “ garment register ” from evidence ; and that error was committed in permitting one of the plaintiffs to read from their carbon copy bills under the guise of refreshing his recollection.

In order to prove delivery, one of the plaintiffs testified that he received order slips from defendant; that he made .up corresponding boxes of buttons and sent these boxes back by a delivery boy to defendant with the original bills, the order slip and a receipt. Plaintiff then called one of defendant’s employees. She testified that these receipts were initialed by her and. the bills were ‘ ‘ checked ’ ’ by her. She testified later, however, that the checking ” on the bills was solely as to prices and not as to quantities, and she also testified that, although she received merchandise, she did ■ not know whether it was the quantity covered by the bill, and that she never examined or counted the buttons. The receipts never specified the quantities of buttons, but read merely ‘ ‘ one package. ” The delivery boy was not called to testify.

It is quite evident that all that plaintiffs established by this testimony was that they had received orders: from the defendant; that these orders had been accurately filled, the goods packed to correspond; and a correct bill made out. But there is no proof of delivery or competent proof of the agreed price. Such inference as might ordinarily be drawn from defendant’s retention of the bills is destroyed by the absence of proof on the part of the plaintiffs of what defendant did with the bills and the positive evidence on defendant’s part that before the last bills were received (none being payable until the end of the month) protest was made as to the quantities of the goods, and this suit resulted.

In order to further show an agreed value, one of the plaintiffs testified to a conversation with defendant’s deceased partner. This is clearly inadmissible under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure, providing that a person interested in the event shall not be examined as a witness in his own behalf against the survivor of a deceased person — which has been held to refer to a surviving partner. Manning v. Schmitt, 4 App. Div. 431; Green v. Edick, 56 N. Y. 613. See Comstock v. Hier, 73 N. Y. 269; Adams v. Morrison, 113 id. 152.

Guy and Cohalax, JJ., concur.

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide event.  