Jacobs v. Hooker
This text of 1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 472 (Jacobs v. Hooker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The defendant wonld not be injured or taken by surprise by the amendment. He knew what contract for transportation he had made, and on what contract the suit was brought, and there is no suggestion that he is not now as fully prepared for his defense as he ever could be. The objection is, therefore, one of form, and not of substance, and precisely one of those which can be obviated by an amendment. The practice under the late Constitution was for the circuit judge, on the trial, to disregard such variances, and allow the party to apply to the court for leave to amend after verdict. That course was taken because the circuit judge was not deemed to have the power to allow amendments. The statute (2 R. S. 424, § 1) gave the power of amendment “ to the court in which the action was pending.” The circuit judge, not constituting the court in which the action was pending, though he was an officer of the court, had not the power, and the parties were, therefore, of necessity driven to make an application to the court. Now, however, under the new Constitution, that the members of the court try the issues of fact pending therein, the power of amendment is [474]*474with the judge presiding at the trial, to the same extent as when he is presiding at special term, and therefore amendments may be made at nisi prius. I shall therefore allow the amendment to be now made.
Evidence was then given of the arrival of the goods at Troy, and of then- being delivered to the Troy and Ohio line, "and that when they arrived at their destination a part of them were missing, having probably been stolen on their passage.
. The Judge submitted the case to the jury, on the question whether the missing goods, for which this suit was brought, had been abstracted from the parcels during the transit from New York to Troy? The contract of defendant was to carry the goods, which he had received, safely from New York to Troy, and there forward them by the Troy and Ohio line. The facts being established that the defendant had received the various parcels at New York, and that when they arrived at Cleveland a portion of them had been abstracted, and there being no certain evidence in what part of the transit such abstraction had taken place, it was for the jury to determine whether the defendant had carried them to Troy, and there forwarded them by the designated line of transportation.
Verdict for plaintiff.
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1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-hooker-nycirct-1847.