
    Sarah B. Odell, by Henry C. Odell, her Guardian, etc., App’lt, v. Solomon B. Solomon and ano., Resp’ts.
    
      (Superior Court, City of New York, General Term,
    
    
      Filed May 7, 1888.)
    
    .Evidence — Testimony of deceased witness — Taken on a previous trial — What must be shown to entitle party to read from vme—Effect of settling the case on appeal.
    On a previous trial the testimony of a certain witness was taken, judgment was entered and on appeal a proposed case and amendments thereto were settled. A new trial was granted and on the second trial the plaintiff was allowed to read the testimony of the deceased witness from the appeal book. Held, error. That to permit testimony of a witness upon a former trial, since dead, to be given on the after trial, it must appear, that what is offered is the whole testimony given. That there must be proof that the stenographer’s minutes had been taken correctly, and that they had been written out correctly. It cannot be inferred from the settlement of the case that the testimony stated by the case was that of the witness, and that the whole of that witness’s testimony is contained in the case.
    Appeal by plaintiff from judgment entered on verdict for defendants and from order denying motion for new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      Alfred Pagelow, for app’lt; Myer S. Isaacs and Adolph L. Sanger, for resp’ts.
   Sedgwick, J.

The defendants had been the occupants of a store. The plaintiff had been struck by the sash of a window falling from the store, while she was upon the street passing the store. She brought this action for damages, alleging that the sash had fallen through the negligence of the defendants.

The trial below was the second trial of the issues.

After the first trial an appeal had been taken in which a case had been made.

Upon the present trial it was shown by defendants that a, witness, examined upon the' first trial, had died since then. They offered to show what was his former testimony, by reading from the case what appeared to have been his testimony. The reading was permitted, under plaintiff’s objection and exception. I am of opinion that the objection should have been sustained.

The grounds upon which admissibility was placed by the argument, were of different nature.

One ground was that a witness had proved that tne case contained the substance of the minutes of the former trial as taken by the official stenographer and written out by him or under his direction. There seems to be a fatal defect in this ground, because there was no proof that the minutes had been taken correctly or themselves had been written out correctly.

Another ground was that it had been proved that the defendants had proposed a case, that the plaintiff had proposed amendments to the case, and thereafter the judge before whom the case was tried, had settled it in the form of the case offered upon the trial.

I do not think that it can be inferred from the action of the plaintiff’s counsel, or of the judge, that the testimony stated by the case to have been that of the witness on the first trial, was the whole of that witness’ testimony, on the Íoints that appeared by the case to have been touched upon. 'o permit testimony of a witness upon a former trial, since dead, to be given on the after trial, it must appear that what is offered is the whole testimony given. On an appeal there is no presumption; and in this instance there was no proof that the whole testimony was necessary to be inserted in the case for the purposes of the appeal, even on the point of whether there should be a reversal upon the facts; repetitions, incoherencies, terms of phrases, self-contradictions, may have a modified construction placed upon them by the admission of counsel, or the decision of the judge, for the purpose of the appeal, when a jury might properly give another construction. One condition of giving the former testimony of a witness is, that it was given as to the issues-made upon the former trial, and identical with the issues of the second trial. When the testimony is shaped for the case, the result is that the statement of the case is as to its propriety and relevancy for an appeal.

The remaining ground is that it was in the case, and that-legally the case is prima facie proof of what testimony was given on the trial. The same consideration, however, is to be applied, that the case was made not to perpetuate the testimony, but to form the material of an appeal.

Of cases, Ch. J. Kent said in Elting v. Scott (2 J. R., 162), These cases are a species of testimony which ought not perhaps, in any case, to be admitted, unless when the admission is made a condition of granting a new trial, nor has it been the practice to admit them.

They are generally drawn by counsel without any communication with the parties, and often with a view to bring before the court some particular point unconnected with much of the narrative part of the case, and which, for that reason, may have passed without criticism or attention.” Under objection, the defendant’s counsel was allowed to read, as part of the testimony of deceased witness, the following: “Even if a man went into that building in the morning, he could not tell that either one of those sashes was going to fall down.”

The witness was an expert as to the proper construction of windows and sashes, the effect upon them of weather and use, and as to what would be the exterior appearance from time to time, but not, I think, as the possibility of a man not being able to tell from exterior appearances, that the sash was going to fall down.

There is still a question of whether the testimony upon the present trial was not such outside of objectionable matter that under the former decision in this case, there was no proof of negligence of defendants. As counsel on the argument did not advert to the similarity or diffeience between the former and the present testimony, it is to be assumed that the present case was one for the jury.

The judgment should be reversed, as well as the order referring a new trial, and there should be a new trial, with costs to abide the event.

Truax and Dugro, JJ., concur.  