Moran v. Rainbow Appliance Corp.

225 A.D. 587, 233 N.Y.S. 522, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11703
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 13, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 225 A.D. 587 (Moran v. Rainbow Appliance Corp.) 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.

Bluebook
Moran v. Rainbow Appliance Corp., 225 A.D. 587, 233 N.Y.S. 522, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11703 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Crouch, J.

The actions are by the wife to recover damages for personal injuries, and by the husband for loss of services.

Plaintiff wife was employed by the Niagara Electric Service Corporation of Niagara Falls to demonstrate a mangle manufactured and sold to the Niagara Company by the defendant. The injury was sustained while operating the mangle. Recovery is sought solely on account of alleged negligent design of the mangle, there being no claim of negligence in construction or in materials used. The actions were tried together and resulted in a verdict of no cause of action in each case. Thereupon a motion was made for a new trial upon the ground, in substance, that defendant’s counsel had been guilty of misconduct on the trial in the examination of certain witnesses, and by improper references to the fact that plaintiff, under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, was entitled to compensation from her employer. The motion was denied. Plaintiffs appealed from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

Appellants, desiring a review on the sole ground of error arising from the alleged misconduct above referred to, prepared and served a proposed bill of exceptions. It contains a literal transcript of so much of the record only as bears directly on the error assigned. So far as the balance of the record appears at all, it is in the usual and characteristic form of condensed statements. Respondent proposed numerous amendments, which embrace substantially a complete transcript of the stenographer’s minutes. The order appealed from settled the bill of exceptions by allowing all of the proposed amendments.

An examination of the proposed bill of exceptions discloses no exception which raises a question of law. N or would such a question have been raised by the denial of a motion to withdraw a juror, (iChesebrough v. Conover, 140 N. Y. 382, 388; Caltano v. Metropolitan Street R. Co., 173 id. 565, 572; Sarconi v. 122 W. 26th St. Corp., 241 id. 340.)

Since there is no question of law to be reviewed, a bill of exceptions is inappropriate. (Rules Civ. Prac. rule 232; Grobert Realty Co., Inc., v. Dorf Bros. & Co., Inc., 118 Misc. 856; Derby v. General Electric Co., 208 App. Div. 529, 532.)

The question which appellants seek to bring up is, however, subject to review in the Appellate Division under its power to deal with the facts. {Regan v. Frontier Elevator & Mill Co., 211 App, Div. 164; Zirnber v. Kress, 225 id. 16.)

[590]*590But errors of fact must be reviewed on a case, not upon a bill of exceptions. The difference, however, is now largely one of name. v It would tend to simplify appellate procedure if the term “ bill of exceptions ” was eliminated, as was once thought to have been done. (See Throop’s Code Civ. Proc. [1877] § 997, note.)

A bill of exceptions is the traditional form of record upon which to review questions of law alone. Where questions of fact either alone or coupled with questions of law are to be reviewed, the appropriate form of record is a case. The distinction between the two forms of record has often been said to be that a case must contain all the evidence, while a bill of exceptions should contain only so much of the evidence as is necessary to present the questions of law to be raised. The literal language of rule 232 of the Rules of Civil Practice lends color to that view. Nevertheless, it is not so. This court in Derby v. General Electric Co. (supra) took occasion to point out in a carefully considered opinion that a case need not necessarily contain all the evidence and other proceedings on the trial. All that is required, or indeed, permitted, is so much only thereof as is material to the questions to be raised. Nor do the rules necessarily require that what is included shall be by question and answer, for with the approval of the judge the parties may agree on any facts proven, to be inserted instead of the testimony. The substance of the evidence omitted as immaterial may be included in a brief statement. (Rules Civ. Prac. rule 230.) These rules apply alike to a bill of exceptions and to a case.' Neither the one nor the other should contain any more of the evidence and other proceedings on the trial than is material to the questions to be raised. (See, also, Martin v. Donnelly, 223 App. Div. 353.)

It is important that trial judges and lawyers should appreciate that fact. . Now, as in the days of Howland v. Woodruff (60 N. Y. 73, 77), we are beset by “machine-made cases.” As Allen, J., there said: “ Stenographers have taken the place of the attorneys whose duty it is to prepare, and of the counsel whose duty it is to peruse and examine, and of the judge who should settle cases and exceptions for the purpose of review.”

To the end that the record in this case should bear a technically correct name and should be carefully and methodically prepared, we are disposed to reverse the order as made and to remit the parties to the court below, there to agree upon or to settle a case.

Since substantially the same questions which have been argued here will arise in connection with that settlement, it may be useful to discuss the matter briefly.

In preparing the proposed case, the burden rests upon appellant to see that it contains all the evidence that may fairly be said to be [591]*591material, not only from his own standpoint, but from that of his adversary, and,- equally important, to see that it contains nothing more. The opinion in Derby v. General Electric Co. (supra) gives one illustration. Others may be found in the printed records of Spitzer v. New York Central R. R. Co. (211 App. Div. 332) and Reid v. Josephs (213 id. 846). Upon the respondent rests the burden of checking up the proposed record not only as to what it omits but also as to what it contains. Finally, it is the duty of the trial judge, in settling the case, to pass liberally but not too liberally upon the materiality of the portions of the record proposed by both parties. What is material to a question is generally only the evidence which bears upon it more or less directly within the limits of reasonable argument. For instance, if the question was the weight of the evidence on issues of negligence and contributory negligence, all of the evidence on those issues would be material. If the question was the admissibility of some particular bit of evidence under sections 346 and 347 of the Civil Practice Act, little, if any, more than the' specific questions, with the objections and rulings thereon, and the answers, if any, would be material. And ordinarily the same would be true on any question of law arising on evidential rulings or in connection with the charge to the jury and on any question of fact which might have been a question of law had a proper request for a ruling been made. (See Cattano v. Metropolitan Street R. Co., supra.) But even in those instances no hard and fast rule may be laid down. Each case must be dealt with on its own facts. Colloquies between court and counsel, unless directly involved in a charge of misconduct, should generally be omitted. For instance, at the opening of the trial here a motion was made to dismiss the complaint for insufficiency. The question thus raised was unusual. The ensuing discussion between the trial judge and both counsel covers upwards of thirty pages of the minutes.

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.D. 587, 233 N.Y.S. 522, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moran-v-rainbow-appliance-corp-nyappdiv-1929.