
    Union Bank of Brooklyn, Respondent, v. Jacob Deshel and Others, Appellants, and Another, Defendant.
    Second Department,
    June 17, 1910.
    Bills and notes—indorser—evidence—receipt of notice of dishonor — offer of compromise.
    In an action against the indorser of a promissory note evidence tending to show that he did not receive notice of dishonor is competent upon the question as to whether such notice was ever mailed to him, and the exclusion of evidence is error.
    An offer of compromise which contains no express admission of fact is not admissible in evidence against the maker, especially when it was made after suit brought. The admission of such offer in evidence is' reversible error.
    An offer made after suit brought to pay the face of a claim in full settlement, but not the interest or costs, is an offer of compromise.
    Appeal' by the defendants, Jacob Deshel and others, from a judgment of the Municipal Court of the city of Kew Torlc, borough of Brooklyn, in favor of the plaintiff, rendered on the l'7th day' of November, 1909.
    
      Jerome A. Strauss, for the appellants.
    
      Charles Burstein, for the respondent.
   Carr, J.:

The defendants appeal from a judgment of the Municipal Court,, entered against them for the sum of $420.79, in an action brought to-charge them as indorsers of a promissory note made by one Medoff and discounted by the plaintiff. Thé judgment is attacked upon .several grounds, which are based upon a claimed insufficiency of proof at thé trial as to the presentment of the note at its maturity and the giving of notice of the dishonor, thereof, as well as because of claimed errors of the-trial court in the admission and exclusion of certain evidence offered at the trial. The note was payable at the banking office of - the plaintiff 'itself, and no serious question of its presentment at maturity arises upon the proofs.. The chief controversy was as to the giving of notice .of dishonor Or protest. Proof was offered to show a' mailing of such notice to the defendant indorsers. The defendants sought to show that no notice of dishonor had ever been received by them. Some of their evidence on this point was admitted and some excluded under Objection -by the plaintiff. The exclusion of this evidence was error, for while the non-receipt of the notice, provided it had been duly mailed, would not have exonerated the defendants, from liability (Neg. Inst. Law [Gen. Laws, chap. 50; Laws of 1897, chap. 612; Consol. Laws, chap. 38; Laws of 1909, chap. 43], § 176; Requa v. Collins, 51 N. Y. 145), yet proof.of the non-receipt of the notice was competent on the question of whether there had ever been an actual mailing. Such proof would constitute a circumstance in which the proof as to' the mailing was' to be weighed - and considered. In our opinion, however, a far more serious error crept into the case which requires a reversal of the judgment. ' After the plaintiff brought this action it appears that some conference or negotiation took place -between its attorney and the attorneys for the defendants. In consequence thereof the defendants’ attorneys sent á letter to the plaintiff’s attorney which reads as follows:

Union Bank of Bklyn. against J. Deshel et dl.
Dear Sir.— Enclosed please find check for $355.59 in full settlement of the above matter, you having agreed to accept the face amount of the complaint.
“ Please be kind enough to . mail to us by return mail, the note in this case, and also a discontinuance of the proceeding.”

Inclosed with this letter was a check of the defendants’ attorneys ' for the amount specified. The check was not accepted but was returned to its makers. On the trial the plaintiff offered the letter in evidence, and it was received over the objection of the defendants, who took an exception to its admission.

The-plaintiff’s theory of the admissibility of this letter is that it was an implied admission of liability on the part of the defendants. The authority of the defendants’ attorneys in sending the letter is not disputed. On the face of the letter there is no admission of any fact whatever. It offered to pay the amount stated in the complaint as due on the note, but did not include either the accrued interest or the costs demanded in the complaint. It was, therefore, a tender of less than what was demanded, and truly an offer of compromise or settlement. It is well and long settled that an offer of compromise, which contains no express admission of fact, is not admissible in evidence against the maker, especially after suit is brought. ( White v. Old Dominion Steamship Co., 102 N. Y. 660.; Smith v. Satterlee, 130 id. 677; Tennant v. Dudley, 144 id. 504.) It is sought to take the question in this case outside this general rule by contending that the offer to pay, here shown, was of the amount sued for, and, therefore, not in compromise; but this cannot be done without ignoring the plain fact that the amount offered was less than the amount sued for, as it did not include interest or costs, and that the offer was made as a consequence of negotiations for a settlement. Eor did the letter in any way, except as an implied admission of liability, contradict any statement of fact testified to by -any witness for the defendants. As an implied admission of liability it was clearly not competent proof against the defendants, under the circumstances of this case. The rule excluding such evidence is founded on public policy, which favors attempts at mutual adjustment and settlement as far as possible, without exposing either party to a risk, unless there be an express admission of a fact in issue.

I recommend, therefore) that the judgment of the Municipal Court be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.

Burr,. Thomas and Rich, JJ., concurred; Hirsohberg, P. J., concurred on first ground stated in the opinion.

Judgment of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the’ event.  