Sands v. . Crooke

46 N.Y. 564, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 299
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 28, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 N.Y. 564 (Sands v. . Crooke) 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
Sands v. . Crooke, 46 N.Y. 564, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 299 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Batallo, J.

This action was brought to recover certain losses sustained by the plaintiffs, and against which they alleged that the defendant had, by an oral agreement, undertaken to indemnify them.

The defendant was the owner of a dock and storehouse situate on the Hudson river at Poughkeepsie, which had, prior to May, 1867, been used for the freighting business, but were at that time not in use. The complaint alleges that the disuse of the property for that purpose detracted largely from its value, and that the defendant, being desirous of re-establishing the freighting business from his said dock, on or about the 7th of May, 1867, agreed with the plaintiffs to *566 grant to them the use of the dock and storehouse for the freighting season of .1867, and that in consideration that they would carry on the freighting business from the dock, from that date onward to the close of navigation, and run a boat therefrom to the city of New York for the transportation of freight and passengers, the defendant would pay all loss or damage they should incur thereby; and that it was further agreed between the parties, that, in case the business should prove profitable, the plaintiffs should pay the defendant for the use of the dock and storehouse the sum of not more than $300.

The complaint then alleges that in pursuance of the agreement i^he plaintiffs chartered a steamboat, and from the 21st of May, 1867, to the close of the freighting season conducted the freight business from said dock, in the same manner as the freighting business was and had been for many years past conducted from similar docks, and by freighters on the Hudson river, and in so doing sustained a loss of upward of $7,500.

The defendant, by his answer, denied the agreement to indemnify, and also set up that the plaintiffs’ losses were caused by their own negligence in conducting the business; and further, that they did not grow out of the legitimate freighting business, but out of operations not included in such business.

The issues were tried by jury at the circuit, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs for $6,000 damages.

It appeared upon the trial that a large part of the plaintiffs’ losses were incurred in buying and selling live stock and grain, which dealings, they contended, were necessary for the purpose of bringing custom to the boat.

The questions litigated at the trial related' in the main to the facts of the case. The plaintiffs claimed that the defendant had agreed to indemnify them against all losses which they might sustain in the business, including not only the transportation or freighting business proper, but also then* dealings in live stock and grain; and in support of this claim they introduced testimony (not excepted to) to the effect that *567 the defendant agreed to indemnify them against loss in the freighting business, and that other parties, engaged in a similar kind of freighting business, were in the habit of trading in stock and grain, and that such dealings were incidental to and included in the freighting business as customarily conducted.

The plaintiffs and witnesses called by them also testified, that the defendant was cognizant of the dealings of the plaintiffs in stock and grain, and sanctioned them, and that in some instances he directed the purchases to be made.

All of these allegations were controverted by the defendant. He testified that he never agreed to indemnify the plaintiffs against losses in the freighting business. That all that he said upon the subject was that if the plaintiff, Winans, would live at Poughkeepsie, and go upon the boat, and attend to the money matters he would guarantee that the plaintiffs should lose nothing by the boat. That he never sanctioned their dealings in live stock and grain, but advised against them, and that they were not part of the freighting business, and in corroboration of his version an estimate in writing was referred to, as having been the basis of the arrangement between the parties, which estimate showed the expected receipts and disbursements of the transportation business, but contained no reference to any trading in live stock and grain.

Witnesses on the part of the defendant also testified, that the freighting business did not include the purchase and sale of live stock and grain.

The court at the trial submitted to the jury the controverted questions as to the guaranty, and the subjects which it was intended by the parties to embrace.

The jury must have found in favor of the plaintiffs’ version of the contract, as the amount of their verdict exceeded the loss incurred in the business of the boat.

A motion for a new trial upon the evidence, and upon exceptions, was made to the judge at circuit and denied, and judgment was thereupon entered upon the verdict.

*568 An appeal from that judgment, and also from the order denying a new trial, was taken to the General Term, and was heard upon a case containing the evidence, as well as the exceptions taken at the trial. The General Term reversed the judgment and granted a new trial.

The appeal to this court from the order granting a new trial, seems to have been brought upon the assumption that sections 268 and 272 of the Code, which provide that a judgment shall not be deemed to have been reversed on questions of fact, unless so stated in the order of reversal, apply to cases tried by jury. But it will be seen by reference to those sections, that they apply only to cases fried by the court or a referee, and we have lately held, in the case of Wright v. Hunter (ante page 409. Rep.), that in cases tried by jury, where a new trial is granted, at General Term, we will not entertain an appeal from the order granting a new trial, if it appears from the return that such order was or may have been made upon questions of fact.

Where there is a substantial conflict in the testimony, and a motion for a new trial, upon the evidence, has been made at Special Term, or to the judge at circuit, and denied, and an appeal from that order taken to the General Term, the question of the weight of evidence is properly before the General Term; and though there be also exceptions in the case, it is impossible to determine from the record that the new trial was granted upon the exceptions alone.

The appellant, therefore, in such a case fails to show that the General Term has committed an error of law in granting the new trial. If granted upon the evidence (the trial having been by jury), its decision is not reviewable in this court. 30 N. Y., 134; Wright v. Hunter, supra.)

The present case appears to have been before the General Term in proper shape for review upon the facts. There was a serious question, upon the evidence, whether the defendant’s guaranty extended to the plaintiffs’ operations in stock and grain, or was confined to the business of the boat, or the freighting business, and whether that business included the *569

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.Y. 564, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sands-v-crooke-ny-1871.