Dayton v. . Parke

37 N.E. 642, 142 N.Y. 391, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 788, 97 Sickels 391, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 768
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 642 (Dayton v. . Parke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayton v. . Parke, 37 N.E. 642, 142 N.Y. 391, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 788, 97 Sickels 391, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 768 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Peokham, J.

The trial court directed a verdict for the amount of the plaintiff’s claim for freight, together with six cents damages, for demurrage, and the judgment was thus duly entered, with costs. Both parties appealed, and the General Term, upon plaintiff’s appeal, modified the judgment by increasing the amount allowed plaintiff for demurrage from six cents to three hundred and twelve dollars, and it affirmed the judgment upon defendants’ appeal. The defendants have appealed here from the judgment as so modified, and also from several orders relating to costs, and to the amendment of the judgment as to the amount that should be directed upon the plaintiff’s claim for freight. Upon the liability of the defendants for freight, we think, as the case appears here, the plain *396 tiff had proved by uncontradicted evidence enough to warrant the court in directing; a verdict.

The defendants, in addition to other evidence on the subject, admitted in so many words that plaintiff’s claim against them for freight was correct. This did not preclude them from proving that the admission was erroneous, or from giving any other explanation of it that they could, but they did not prove anything of the kind, nor was any explanation of the admission attempted. It is, indeed, said that the course of the trial was such as to assume the sufficiency of certain hearsay evidence to prove the alleged fact that the defendants had sold the railroad ties to the Long Island Eailroad Company, in behalf of the consignors thereof, before the vessel in which they were loaded left Charleston, and upon such alleged facts the defendants base their claim that they did not receive the cargo, and were not liable for the freight due the owners of the vessel upon its arrival at the dock of the Long Island Eailroad Company. However that may be, we cannot say from a perusal of the record that this hearsay evidence was received or allowed upon the assumption that it proved the fact stated as hearsay. This hearsay evidence first came out in the course of the direct examination of a witness for the plaintiff who was giving material evidence in the case on the part of the plaintiff, and the mere fact that he stated some further matter as his understanding or as what he supposed to be true, cannot be grasped by the defendants as proof of the fact itself. This is true, even though on cross-examinatian as to what took plane prior to the making of the charter party in question the witness reiterates his understanding that the ties which he was seeking a charter party to transport from Charleston had already been sold by defendants, as agents of the consignors, to the Long Island Eailroad Company. It would seem from this record that the fact was stated as an understanding on the part of the witness, more for the purpose of identifying the ties than for any purpose of proving a sale, and the case fails to show that after this evidence had been so given the trial proceeded upon the theory *397 that the fact had been sufficiently proved. Sometimes it does appear from the record that the trial has proceeded upon a theory that certain facts were properly proved, yet on appeal the case presents no sufficient evidence of them. In such case and in furtherance of justice the facts will be assumed in accordance with the theory. We cannot find enough in this case to warrant us in doing it here.

Witnesses in giving evidence in the course of an oral examination frequently state as facts those things which they plainly have no personal knowledge of. It would be too strict practice to say that unless a motion is made and the objectionable evidence is stricken out either party can refer to it as proof of the fact itself. Even where a witness is asked for evidence which is plainly hearsay, and he gives it as- such, it ought to appear from the course of the trial that the evidence was received as sufficient proof of the fact concerning which it. was given or it will not be so regarded. Receiving a copy of a written document instead of the original, and without objection that the original should be produced, is obviously a very different case.

In such event there is a direct offer to prove the original paper by the production of the copy, and the party against whom it is offered is then put to his objection, and if he fail to object to the admission of the copy he of course ought not thereafter to be permitted so to do.

The learned trial judge refused to regard the fact of sale as proved by this hearsay evidence. It is clear he did not suppose that the trial had proceeded upon any theory that such fact had in that way been sufficiently proved. This should render an appellate court still more reluctant to make such an assumption, especially where the record is not at all clear that the theory was assumed by both counsel. That the learned counsel for the appellant assumed it and regarded the fact as sufficiently proved is without doubt true, but confined as we are to the record for proof we are compelled to say that we do not find sufficient evidence that the fact was assumed on the trial to permit us to make the assumption here.

*398 Ignoring the hearsay evidence the case is then hare of proof that would call for the submission of the question to the jury, whether the railroad ties in suit had been sold by defendants to the Long Island Railroad Company before the arrival of the vessel at the port of Rew York. This was the only question upon which counsel foi defendants asked to go to the jury after the denial of his motion for the direction of a verdict in their favor. Upon this branch of the case we cannot see that any error was committed by the trial judge.

Another and a different question is presented with regard to the plaintiff’s claim for demurrage.

The G-eneral Term, has raised the amount recovered against the defendants from six cents to three hundred and twelve dollars. This amount was arrived at by allowing six days for demurrage, at the rate of $52 per day, as provided in the charter party. The provision in the charter party on the subject of demurrage was held to be binding upon the defendants, although they were strangers to the instrument. I am not aware of any provision of law which in such a case as this would permit the Supreme Court on appeal to add to the original judgment a sum which it finds from the evidence to be due plaintiff for demurrage, when the question as to what amount is due is one of fact upon which either party might demand the verdict of a jury. Aside from that question, however, there is the remaining and important one whether defendants upon this proof are liable in any sum whatever for demurrage. Demurrage, technically so called, is founded upon some contract entered into between the consignor or freighter and the ship owner, which, under certain circumstances, is held to be assumed by the consignee. (Abbott on Shipping, sec. 1, page 380, m. p. 303, et seq.) A delay beyond the time designated in the contract gives a cause of action in favor of the ship owner. Although it is said to be a claim in the nature of freight, yet it is perfectly distinct and separate therefrom. While a consignee, by accepting the goods consigned to him under a bill of lading by which the person receiving the goods is to pay freight, is held bound by an *399

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 642, 142 N.Y. 391, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 788, 97 Sickels 391, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-parke-ny-1894.