
    Eugene E. Lewis, Resp’t, v. Enos Merritt, App’lt.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed April 16, 1889.)
    
    
      1. Evidence—Transactions with deceased—When competent under
    Code Orv. Pro., § 829.
    In an action by an executor to recover damages for the conversion of certain notes belonging to the estate, where the question at issue was whether the notes which before her death belonged to the deceased passed to the defendant rightfully, because with the consent, or wrongfully because without her consent, the executor was permitted to give testimony tending to show that there had been no personal transaction between the deceased and the defendant, by force of which his possession could have been rightful and honest. Held, that the defendant may offer evidence to contradict the executor, and affirm the possibility of a personal transaction between himself and the deceased.
    2. Giets—Instructions to jury—Error.
    In submitting the question to the jury, whether there had been a gift of the notes to the defendant, the court laid down the rv.le that a gift’ must be proved “beyond suspicion.” Held, error.
    
      Appeal from a judgment supreme court, general term, fifth department, affirming a judgment entered upon a verdict rendered at the Yates county circuit.
    
      D. Morris, for app’lt; Charles S. Baker, for resp’t.
    
      
       Reversing 5 N. Y. State Rep., 274; see former appeal, 98 N. Y., 206.
    
   Finch, J.

—This case was tried, so far as evidence was admitted or rejected, under objections founded upon section 829 of the Code, substantially in accordance with our opinion rendered in the same case upon a previous appeal (98 N. Y., 206), except possibly as to a single inquiry. We then held that the question put to the defendant and excluded, whether he took the notes “from any trunk or any person,” was a competent and proper inquiry, mainly because it served to answer and contradict the evidence of the executor and the inferences which that evidence tended to establish. On this trial, the defendant was asked the same question in a modified form, and his answer was .excluded. That question was, “Did you take them”—the notes—“ from any person without their consent?”

The action was brought and defended upon the conceded fact that defendant had possession of the notes. That before her death they belonged to deceased was another conceded fact. Whether they passed to defendant rightfully because with her consent, or wrongfully because without her consent, was the precise issue between the parties. Now, the executor testified that a few hours before the death of deceased, and when she was in an insensible state, which never improved, he saw these notes in her tin trunk; that just after her death he looked again, and they were gone; and that defendant was in the house that night and had opportunity to take them.

The direct inference from this proof was that defendant wrongfully took the notes without the knowledge or consent of the owner, and it tended to establish that there had been no personal transaction between such owner and the defendant by force of which his possession could have been rightful and honest. The executor was, therefore, examined as to a personsal transaction with the deceased by the defendant; that is he negatived the existence of any such transaction.

In answer, the defendant was permitted to affirm its possibility by the terms of the Code. This he could do both directly and indirectly. He was permitted to swear that he had possession of the notes a week before the death of deceased, and that when the executor professed to have found them in the trunk they were in fact not there, but in defendant’s possession. If this evidence was true, it directly contradicted the executor as to his facts, and indirectly as to his inference of a wrongful taking. But was defendant «confined to that indirect rebuttal of the inference? Had he not the right to meet it directly, and say that his possession, concededly derived from deceased if the notes were not stolen, was rightfully obtained, because with her consent? If the executor it is asked, could swear as he did, through the medium of the inference he established, that defendant took the notes without the consent of the deceased, and so, wrongfully, why may not the defendant rebut the inference by saying that he took the notes with her'consent and so rightfully.

The answer is that the executor swore to independent facts tending to show that the personal transaction in issue was impossible, and defendant was at liberty to contradict those facts and remove that impossibility. That he was fully permitted to do, but not allowed to go further and swear that such personal transaction was not only possible, but did in truth actually take place. In any event the excluded evidence would have added little to his contradiction of the executor, for, if he was believed, he had already thoroughly and perfectly rebutted the plaintiff’s evidence, and the further proof was needless in rebuttal, and only useful to establish an affirmative defense, for which purpose, as we held on the former appeal it was not available. We ought not to reverse the judgment upon that ground.

But there was an error in the charge of the court to the jury which is too serious to be overlooked.

The question submitted to them was one of gift. ’ The evidence demonstrated that the notes were either wrongfully taken or were given by deceased to the defendant.. The latter was his ground of defence and he gave evidence tending to prove it. In submitting the-question to the jury whether there was such a gift to the defendant the learned judge laid down the rule that a gift must be proved £ ‘beyond suspicion,” and reiterated the statement until it became the one prominent feature of the charge. The rule was not confined to a gift causa mortis in terms, but may fairly be so regarded under the circumstances of the trial. I do not know of anything which is required to be proved beyond suspicion. If there is anything, that particular fact can never be proved at all, for’ suspicion may exist wholly without evidence, in opposition to the most clear and cogent proof, and may remain after even the last reasonable doubt is removed. It may be founded upon the mere personal appearance of the party or witnesses, upon something in their manner real or imagined, or even upon nothing except a suspicious temperament of the observer. It is amenable to no rules, it perverts simple and harmless actions, and sees mischief where none exists. To put such a standard before a jury is to take away all measurement of or control over the volume of proof required, and leave the verdict to an irresponsible and undiscoverable impulse. When it was said in Grey v. Grey (47 N. Y., 552), that a gift mortis causa must be proved beyond suspicion, the meaning of the learned judge was entirely plain and ought not to be misapprehended. It was a passing remark and very briefly phrased, and obviously meant that circumstances legitimately raising a suspicion of fraud or wrong must be explained away. The same judge in Grymes v. Hone (49 N. Y., 17), upheld such a gift, saying “as there is great danger of fraud in this sort of gift, courts cannot be too cautious in requiring clear proof of the transaction. This has been the rule from the early days of the civil law (which required five witnessess to such a gift) down to the present time:” and he added as to the case before him “the proof of the assignment is entirely clear.” Undoubtedly in such cases the proof must be clear and convincing, and strong and satisfactory, but it is not correct to say that the presumptions of law are against a gift as the learned judge charged, although it is true that the law does not presume in its favor, but requires clear and convincing proof: nor was it proper to say to the jury that the fact of a gift must be proved beyond suspicion.

For this error the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.

All concur. _  