The plaintiffs put in a bill of lading of the property. It showed that the defendants were the consignors, and E. E. Vanderlip was the consignee. Hrima facie, they or he had right to possession and control of it, subject to the conditions of' the bill of lading. (Lawrence v. Minturn, 17 How. [U. S.] 100.) By those it was subject to the cost of transportation and canal tolls. The plaintiffs may not seriously contest this. The most that they can successfully claim is a lien for freight money and tolls, and a right to hold the cargo until payment thereof. That lien and that right, if they exist at all, are shown by an instrument in writing. It is in effect one between the plaintiffs and the defendants; for it was made for the latter by their agents, the forwarders of the goods; and with the former through their assignors. This contract is the foundation of the plaintiffs’ right. They offered it in evidence. It would and should have been received, had it been offered generally as evidence of a contract of affreightment. It was not by the very terms of the offer; but as evidence of an ownership of the cause of action by assignment. It did not alone, *469unaided by presumptions or other evidence, prove that. It showed that the plaintiffs had not a personal right in it unless they had performed a condition precedent; that was, the acceptance of a draft that went with it. The fact of acceptance was either to be presumed or to be shown by proof aliunde. An acceptance, to charge, in this State, must be in writing. (1 B. S Y68, § 6.) The plaintiffs offered to prove by paroi the fact of acceptance. The court declined proof by paroi, and required the production of the draft. The plaintiffs’ position is, that no evidence was needed save the presumption arising from their possession of the contract of affreightment; that it was to be presumed that it came into their hands honestly and in pursuance of the conditions indorsed upon it. When a party to a forensic proceeding tenders in support of his case, a document which must be taken prima facie to be the property of another, a court will presume that he did not come by it in a tortious way (Little-ton, book 3, ch. 5, §§ 3Y5-3YY), for wrongful or tortious conduct will not be presumed. We may not, then, assume that the plaintiffs became possessed of the bill of affreightment otherwise than honestly. Though there are several ways to be conceived of in which it is possible that they may have got it honestly, another presumption comes in here to indicate the one honest way in which they got it. It is of the class that is drawn from the ordinary conduct of mankind, the habits of society, the usages of trade, and the natural and usual course of business. (Roberts v. Bethell, 12 C. B. 778.) Here we find the plaintiffs at the time of the trial, in May, 18Y5, in visible and notorious possession of a contract of affreightment which had been made and delivered to another over six years before. It was an instrument which they could not rightfully claim to own, unless they had complied with a condition precedent to their obtaining ownership. That condition precedent was of importance to that other party, who had a pecuniary interest in having it performed before the instrument left his hands to come to the control of the plaintiffs. It is contrary to the ordinary conduct of mankind, to the habits of society, to the usages of trade and the natural and usual course of business, that the *470party thus interested should be silent under the possession of that instrument by the plaintiffs, and should have made no attempt to take it therefrom, if it went there illegally or otherwise than in compliance with the conditions on which it could alone rightfully become the property of the plaintiffs. It is so .highly probable that men will act as is their pecuniary interest, that the presumption is, in the absence of contrary pi’oof, that in a given case they have so acted. So the giving of a promissory note is presumptive that the payee owes nothing to the maker. (De Freest v. Bloomingdale, 5 Den. 304.) The return of an execution satisfied raises the presumption that the plaintiff in it received the money. (Boyd v. Foot, 5 Bosw. 110.) Payment of an obligation is presumed where the obligatory instrument is in the possession of the obligor. (Garlock v. Geortner, 7 Wend. 198 ; Alvord v. Baker, 9 id. 323; Braman v. Bingham, 26 N. Y. 493.) Here the possession by the plaintiffs of the contract, which it was the pecuniary interest of the first assignee to hold until the condition precedent to a right to it had been performed by the plaintiffs, raises the presumption that that condition had been satisfactorily met. As the ordinary and natural way to meet it was to accept the draft named in it, the presumption is that the draft was accepted. Otherwise the first assignee would not have voluntarily let go of the contract; and if it had been got from him wrongfully, would have pursued it.
There is another consideration. The defendants are not parties to the draft, nor privies. The fact of acceptance of it by the plaintiffs is collateral to the issue in the pending action. Though the plaintiffs could not be charged as acceptors, unless their acceptance was in writing, and in a suit against them as acceptors the written acceptance would need to be produced, or the absence of it accounted for, yet, in this action, the fact of an acceptance may be proved by paroi, inasmuch as it is a collateral fact. A stranger to a written instrument may dispute the truth of its contents by oral proof ; and so far as a controversy is with a stranger to it, a party to it may do the same; McMaster v. Ins. Co. (55 N. Y. 222.) A fortiori may a *471party to it, in such a controversy, prove by paroi that it had existence. Thus the fact of a tenancy may be proveed by paroi, though there be a written lease [Rex v. Kingston-upon-Hull, 7 B. & C. 611), which is recognized in Augustien v. Challis (1 Exch. [Wels., Hurl. & Gord.] 279), though it is there held that the lease must be produced if it is sought to show that rent was due. (See, also, Whitfield v. Brand, 16 M. & W. 282.) The principle seems to be, that the contents of a written instrument cannot be given in evidence by paroi when the contract contained in it is the subject of the suit (per Parke, B., Strother v. Barr, 5 Bing. 136); but, as is the inference, the existence of the relation under the instrument, and the fact of the existence of it, may be. (See Davis v. Reynolds, 1 Starkie’s N. P. 92). By statute in Virginia, a gift of a slave was not valid unless in writing and recorded; but paroi evidence was admitted of the existence of a deed of gift, to show the nature of the possession. (Spiers v. Willison, 4 Cranch, 398; see, also, Dennett v. Crocker, 8 Greenl, 239.)
For these two reasons, without noticing other points made by the plaintiffs, it seems that there was error in not taking paroi proof of the fact of an acceptance of a draft accompanying the contract of affreightment, and in not receiving that contract in evidence.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, etc.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.