Klein v. American Cigar Co.
This text of 108 A.D. 341 (Klein v. American Cigar Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The judgment in'this case must be reversed because of a ruling of the court below in permitting the plaintiff to testify, on an erroneous assumption as to the value of his services, that matter being one of the important issues in the case and constituting a part of the plaintiff’s cause of action. It is set forth in the-complaint that the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, performed certain work, labor and services, paid out and expended certain moneys and fur- , nislied certain materials and machinery, all of. the reasonable value of a sum stated. The defendant in its answer denied those allegations of the complaint. On the trial the plaintiff testified in effect that he was the patentee of a certain process for the production of ink prepared for printing on cigars. In the language of the plain-, tiff, “ If you smoke the cigar the name appears in the ashes in the color which I apply on the tobacco. I invented the idea mostly for a machine for printing to
The cause of action as.alleged was not strictly proven, but it was shown that the plaintiff performed work, labor and" services in operating the machine, and it is plain from the record that there were three things for all or either of which the jury might have found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff: First, $500 for getting ink ready; second, reasonable compensation for operating the machine during the experimental period; and, third, expenses of the plaintiff incurred in the matter. The judge charged the jury [344]*344that if they thought there was no definite agreement to pay the plaintiff $500 they could not find a verdict for that-; so, if they found the defendant was otherwise liable, they could give the plaintiff • reasonable compensation for the number of days which they thought from the evidence he was engaged in testing the machine. The jury brought in a general verdict of $750. How that sum was arrived at does not appear. During the course of the trial the plaintiff, being under examination as a witness, was asked what in his opinion was the reasonable value of his own services between September tenth or eleventh and November tenth, referring to the period during which the machine was being operated. This question was objected to on' the ground that it did not appear in any way that, the' plaintiff was qualified as an expert witness to testify to the value of services in operating the machine; for that was all he did with it. He fixed the value of his services at $1,300', because he was a chemist, and the value of his time as a chemist was the basis of his testimony, but what he was entitled to claim for was the value- of his time in operating the machine, and it -was not shown that only a chemist could operate it. He was to be paid for the ink by special contract,, and he was to be paid his expenses. Work, labor and service connected with the operation of the machine is an entirely independent subject. Now it is true that the verdict is only for $750, but for all that we are able to gather from' the record that $750 may have been awarded for services in operating the machine only, and the jury may have rejected altogether the plaintiff’s claim of a- contract existing for $500 for the ink. We cannot speculate upon the method by which the jury reached this sum. We think it evident that the plaintiff was .not entitled to be paid for his services as a chemist during the time the machine Was being tested, and there is no proof whatever in the case of the value of services rendered during that period.
For that reason the - judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered,-with costs to appellant to abide the event.
O’Brien, P. J., Ingraham, McLaughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Jud
Sic.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
108 A.D. 341, 95 N.Y.S. 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-american-cigar-co-nyappdiv-1905.