
    Jennie Fisher, Resp’t, v. Robert P. Monroe et al., App’lts.
    
    
      (New York Common Pleas, General Term,
    
    
      Filed February 6, 1893.)
    
    1. Evidence — Admissions on former trial.
    The admissions of a party made on a former trial are admissible against him without first calling his attention thereto. The rule requiring counsel to interrogate a witness respecting an alleged contradictory statement before the latter can be given in evidence does not apply to parties to the action, and as to them such statement is admissible as a declaration against interest.
    
      2. Same — Hypothetical question.
    It is error to admit in evidence answers to a hypothetical question which does not fully and fairly state all the facts proved which bear on the issue.
    3. Contract — Damages.
    Where a contract provides that either party may cancel the agreement by giving two weeks notice to the other, the plaintiff in an action for wrongful discharge can recover only for two weeks salary.
    Appeal from an order of the general term of the city court of New York, affirming a judgment entered upon a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
    
      Wilson W. Hoover and Willam Sulzer, for app’lts; Seaman Miller, for resp’t.
    
      
       Reversing 48 St. Rep., 510.
    
   Bookstaver, J.

This is the second appeal to this court, 16 Daly, 461; 34 St. Rep., 760, and it is unnecessary to state the facts further than will be needed to understand the questions raised on this appeal. The action was for damages sustained by the plaintiff, an actress, by reason of her alleged wrongful discharge by the defendants, who were theatrical managers and proprietors, before the'end of the season specified in the contract between them. The chief ground of the reversal on the former Appeal was that the contract would not necessarily be terminated by a mere temporary disability of the plaintiff, but that as no sufficient excuse for her non-attendance at the rehearsal had been shown, a verdict in her favor could not be sustained; consequently, the chief contention on the second trial centered around this question. In aid of their contention the defendants’ counsel offered plaintiff’s cross-examination on a previous trial in evidence to prove admissions by her as to whether or not she was ill or merely tired out, and also to prove her admissions as to her duties as an actress upon rehearsals.

The court excluded the evidence, unless the attention of the witness was first called to what she had testified to on the former trial. The defendants’ counsel thereupon stated to the court that it was not for the purpose of impeaching the witness, but to prove admissions made by her. Still the court would not allow him to do so, and defendants’ counsel excepted.

It is well settled that an admission made at one stage of an .action binds the parties at all subsequent stages as primary evidence. Larrison v. Payne, 23 St. Rep., 438; Scofield v. Spaulding, 28 id., 108; 54 Hun, 523; Tooker v. Gormer, 2 Hilt., 71. The rule which makes it incumbent upon the cross-examining counsel first to direct the witness' attention with reasonable precision to, and interrogate him respecting an alleged contradictory statement, before the latter may be given in evidence, Crane v. Hardman, 4 E. D. Smith, 448; Everson v. Carpenter, 17 Wend., 419; Root v. Brown, 4 Hun, 797, does not apply to parties to the action, Kennedy v. Wood, 52 Hun, 46; 22 St. Rep., 132; Boehm v. Miller, 45 id., 281, and as to them the alleged contradictory statement is admissible as a declaration against interest. Cook v. Barr, 44 N. Y., 156; Williams v. Sargent, 46 id., 481. And in Meyer v. Campbell, 48 St. Rep., 666, we held that though the statement be a part of a pleading which has been superseded by the service of an amended one, it could still be given in evidence. And in the same case we held that the defendant had the right to offer, and it was error to exclude, plaintiff’s deposition taken de bene esse which was at variance with the allegations of the amended complaint, although that deposition was not competent in plaintiff’s favor since he was present at the trial, but on the ground that it was a declaration against his interest. It was, therefore, error to exclude the cross-examination of the plaintiff on the former trial as far as that related to the questions at issue on this trial. Nor was this error cured by afterwards admitting portions of it in rebuttal in order to impeach the witness, as it must be apparent "that the force of the evidence was greatly weakened by the cross-examination imposed on defendants as a preliminary and the jury might well have been misled as to its weight and effect in consequence. For such a course is very likely to prejudice the minds ■of a jury, especially in the case of a lady, on account of the necessarily unpleasant position in which the party is placed thereby and the apparent harshness of such a course. Besides, the admission was not as broad as the former offer of the defendants.

.We also think it was error to admit the testimony of plaintiff’s experts against defendants’ objection to the hypothetical question, as in our judgment that question did not fully and fairly state all the facts which had been proved in the case bearing upon the issues to be determined.

When this case was before us on the former appeal, defendants were not in a position to raise the question as to the extent of the •damages recoverable in this action, because that had not been sufficiently raised in the court below upon the former trial. But it was distinctly raised on this by defendants’ fifth request to •charge, which was, “ If you find for the plaintiff, then she “shall be entitled to recover only for two weeks salary with interest, less any amount she may have received for services renderedthis was declined by the court, and defendants excepted. The contract expressly provided that either party should be at liberty to cancel the agreement by giving two weeks notice to the other ; and in this respect follows the custom in hiring servants. Sedgwick on Damages lays down the doctrine that notice in such cases was provided in order to allow for liquidated damages. If plaintiff had been paid two weeks’ wages in advance when discharged, she would have had no cause of action. And it is difficult to conceive of a more peremptory notice than the one given the plaintiff. This very question came up for consideration in the city court in the case of Peverly v. Pool, cited and approved in Parry v. Am. Opera Co., 19 Abb. N. C., 270, where the court in delivering the opinion said: “ The only injury which plaintiff could suffer by reason of not receiving the two weeks’ notice provided by the contract would be the amount of the salary for two weeks, and this amount was allowed by the trial court.”

The j udgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event

Bischoff, J., concurs.

Pryor, J.

I concur in the result, but without committing myself to the- rule of damages propounded in the prevailing opinion.  