
    LINDSLEY against THE EUPOPEAN PETROLEUM COMPANY.
    
      Supreme Court, First Department, First District;
    
    
      General Term, January, 1871.
    Trial.—Right to Open and Close.
    In an action on a promissory note, if the answer admits its making and delivery, and sets up an affirmative defense, the defendant is entitled to open and close, on the trial, although the answer deny the other allegations of the complaint; and the refusal of the court or referee to allow him to do so, is error for which a new trial will be awarded.
    Appeal from a judgment.
    This action was brought by Leonard B. Lindsley and Isaac B. Cotterell, to recover the amount of thirteen promissory notes, made by the European Petroleum Company, to the order of L. E. Lahens, and indorsed by Lahens to the plaintiffs.
    The answer of the defendants was as follows:
    “The defendants come into court, and answering the complaint of plaintiffs, admit the making, indorsement, transfer and delivery of the said notes, and deny the other allegations therein contained /’ ’ and then proceeded to set forth an affirmative defense.
    Upon atrial before a referee, the defendants’ counsel proposed to open the case, and insisted on his right so to do, on the ground that the burden of the proof was on the defendant, and that the affirmative was with them. The plaintiffs’ counsel objected, and claimed that he was entitled to open and close the case.
    The referee decided that the plaintiff was entitled to open and close the case; to which decision defendants’ counsel excepted.
    The counsel for plaintiffs thereupon opened the case, produced the promissory notes mentioned in the complaint, and rested.
    The referee having decided in favor of plaintiffs, the defendants appealed to the general term, upon the foregoing and other exceptions.
    
      Frederic R. Coudert, for appellant, argued as follows, on the point above suggested :
    The referee erred in his ruling to the effect that the plaintiffs were entitled to open and close.
    I. The defendants specifically admitted all the facts in the complaint contained, that were necessary to the recovery of plaintiffs, viz: “the making, indorsement, transfer, delivery and non-payment” of the notes in suit. The subsequent denial was manifestly intended to dispute the lawfulness of the claim, and nothing more. If the affirmative defense in the answer was established on the trial, then the plaintiffs were not the lawful owners of the notes in suit, and the defendants were not justly indebted on the notes. If no affirmative defense was proven, then the plaintiffs were entitled to judgment, without any proof whatever.
    II. It being clear that the affirmative was with the defendants, we submit that the error of the learned referee, in denying them their right to open and close, is a subject of review by the appellate court, and that the defendants on this ground alone are entitled to a new trial (Huntington v. Conkey, approved in 31 N. Y., 614; 33 Barb., 218 ; and see Davis v. Mason, 4 Pick., 158; Brooks v. Barrett, 7 Id., 98; 8 Metc., 563; Rolum v. Hanson, 11 Cush., 44; Hoxie v. Green, 37 How. Pr., 97).
    III. Nor is it for the defendant to show that the error of the referee prejudiced him. It is for the plaintiff to prove the negative of that proposition (Green v. White, 37 N. Y., 405).
    
      George C. Genet and James C. Carter, for respondent,
    Argued that the denial of “all other allegations ” was sufficient to entitle plaintiffs to the affirmative, and moreover that it was a question within the discretion of the referee, and his ruling thereon would not be reviewed.
   By the Court. —Ingraham, P. J.

We must decline to look into the other exceptions in the case; but as the referee erred in not allowing defendants to open and close the case, the judgment must accordingly be reversed, and a new trial awarded.

Order accordingly. 
      
       Present, Ingraham, P. J., and G. G. Barnard, and Cardozo, J.J.
     