Schwinger v. . Raymond

83 N.Y. 192, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 471
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 14, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 83 N.Y. 192 (Schwinger v. . Raymond) 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
Schwinger v. . Raymond, 83 N.Y. 192, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 471 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

The action was brought to recover freight agreed to be paid by defendants to plaintiff for transporting on the deck of his canal boat 200 barrels of beans, from Albion and Brockport to the city of Hew York. The complaint alleges that the beans were transported under this agree- *195 meat, and delivered to the defendants, who accepted them. That the freight has not been paid, “ wherefore the plaintiff demands judgment against the defendants for $110, with interest.” The defendants admit an agreement to pay freight, but allege that the plaintiff’s undertaking was to “ carry and deliver the beans in such manner that they would be entirely protected from moisture; ” that he did carry them to the' place agreed upon, but in such a careless and negligent manner they were wet, sprouted, greatly damaged, and a loss was by reason thereof sustained by them (respondents), to the amount of $1,008.94, “no part of which has been paid by the plaintiff, nor have the defendants paid the freight aforesaid, amounting to $110, and the defendants demand judgment for this sum of $1,008.94, and interest, less $110, and interest.”

To this new m,otter the plaintiff interposed a reply, and thereby controverted and denied “ all the allegations thereof.” There was then, at the outset of this litigation, an understanding on both sides of the matters really in controversy, and the issues made by these pleadings were fully litigated. It was the theory of the defendants, as indicated by the answer above set out, and especially by their prayer for judgment, that the plaintiff was entitled to have allowed to him the freight agreed upon, and they should have allowed their damages; but judgment be given only for so much thereof as should remain after canceling the freight agreed upon. It was in pursuance of the same theory that the legal adviser of the defendants, at the close of the trial, submitted to the referee in writing a series of propositions of fact which he deemed established, and conclusions of law which he supposed would follow, with the request to find the facts and law as they were stated, “ and each and every of the same, and each and every part thereof.” The proposed conclusions of law were stated in these words: “ Fwst. That the plaintiff is entitled to recover of the defendants, $159.77. Second. The defendants are entitled to recover damages of the plaintiff in the sum of $1,452.10. Third. The defendants are entitled *196 to judgment ’against the plaintiff in a balance of $992.3-3, and their costs.” Thus reproducing, in separate clauses, the idea already embodied in a single sentence of the answer, for the sums named are the items there referred to with interest added. The referee seems to have had the same understanding, of the case, for by his report he finds: First. That the plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount agreed to be paid as freight on the beans, and, stating the amount, directs judgment to be entered therefor, in favor of the plantiff. Second. That the defendants are not entitled to recover, or to be allowed in this action as against the plaintiff for the damage and injury to their property before mentioned. And answering the requests of the defendants before stated, found the first, but refused to find the second and third. The defendants excepted to the conclusions of law contained in the report, and to the referee’s refusal to find the second and third requests. Upon appeal the G-eneral Term held that the finding of the referee, upon the first clause, in accord anee with the request of the defendants, and the omission of the latter to except thereto, entitled the plaintiff to maintain the judgment, and to that effect is the respondent’s -argument before us. We think it is unsound. The three propositions submitted to the referee should be taken together, and construed as one sentence, with several members. Such, evidently, was the intention of the draftsman. The first and second specifications were but premises upon which the conclusion stated in the third paragraph rested. Taken as a whole, the request was for a finding that the defendants have judgment upon the adjustment of the two claims stated in the first and second paragraphs. In substance that the freight be allowed to the plaintiffs, the damages allowed to the defendants, and judgment ordered for the difference. The defendants did not ask that the plaintiff have judgment, but that he be deemed “ entitled to recover of the defendants” the sum named; the defendants “ entitled to recover damages of the plaintiff, and have judgment for the balance.” Put these requests in one sentence, *197 and there could be no misapprehension in regard to its meaning. It seems to us equally plain as stated by the defendants. And so the referee must have thought, for in his report he uses the words as synonymous, and finds that the defendants are not entitled “to recover or to be allowed” as against the plaintiff, the damages. Upon exceptions to the refusals to find, and exceptions to the conclusions of law stated in the report, the defendants should have been permitted to review the correctness of those findings. But in any view of the case undue effect was given by the learned judges of the Supreme Court to the admission implied in the request to find that the plaintiff was entitled to his freight. There are cases in which two claims could not co-exist; where if the plaintiff was entitled to have his claim allowed, the defendants would be precluded from recovering, and among them are Davis v. Tallcot (2 Kern. 184), Bellinger v. Craigue (31 Barb. 534), Gates v. Preston (41 N. Y. 113), Blair v. Bartlett (75 N. Y. 150, cited by the learned court). They went upon the ground that the plaintiff’s cause of action could be made out only by overcoming the defendants’ claim, that if the latter was well founded it would defeat the former, and a recovery by either would be a conclusive answer to any demand made by the other, because the litigation provoked by either, would necessarily involve the matter upon which both must rely, and it could not be again litigated. Thus a recovery by a physician or surgeon of his fees for services rendered (Bellinger v. Craigue, Gates v. Preston, Blair v. Bartlett), or by a manufacturer for the price of the machine (Davis v. Tallcot), would bar an action by the patient in the first case, or the purchaser in the second, for damages by reason of non-performance of the contract upon which the fee or price depended, because, except upon proof, or admission of performance, the plaintiff could not have recovered. And if in the case before us the defendants had set up a claim for non-delivery or transportation of the goods, a recovery, or an admission of the plaintiff’s right to recover for freight earned under the contract, would have justified the *198 same conclusion. But that is not the case. The plaintiff did perform the contract to carry, and the goods reached their destination.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.Y. 192, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwinger-v-raymond-ny-1880.