Scott v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.

29 Abb. N. Cas. 435
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Abb. N. Cas. 435 (Scott v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co., 29 Abb. N. Cas. 435 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

GILDERSLEEVE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on the verdict of a jury in favor of plaintiff for the [437]*437sum of $5,722.87 damage's and costs. The action was brought to recover damages for injury done to premises No. 36 Murray street by the maintenance and operation of defendants’ elevated railroad.

The only exception taken by the. appellants’ counsel to the admission or exclusion of evidence that calls for any discussion was to the ruling of the learned trial judge in allowing the former tenant to testify as to the motives which influenced him in moving away from the premises. The question objected to by appellants’ counsel is as follows : “ Q.' Now, please state to the jury what your reason was for removing from 36 Murray street to your present store in Park place?” To which answer is made as follows: “ A. The reason was it was dark and smoky; and that was my reason.”

The learned counsel for the appellants claimed that the • question was incompetent and argumentative, as the grounds for his objection. No other grounds of objection than those above stated were raised, and no motion was made to strike out the answer. The objection as to materiality, therefore, cannot now be raised (Sweet v. Tuttle, 14 N. Y. 465 ; Richmondville Union Seminary v. McDonald, 34 Id. 379). It is too late to raise the question of materiality for the first time on "appeal, when, if the objec- , tion had been interposed on the trial, the plaintiff might, if- necessary, have withdrawn the question, and consented that the answer be stricken out.

The witness had given similar testimony before without objection. He had testified as follows : “ Q. After they commenced to build the elevated railroad, what effect did it have on your business there ? A. The effect was to make it dark, and the smoke and steam had an effect. We could not stay in there.” It cannot, therefore, be said that the appellants were prejudiced by the question and answer under consideration.

We are of opinion that the grounds of objection to the question urged by appellants’ counsel cannot be sustained. [438]*438The question, moreover, was a proper one, since the act of moving and the reasons therefor of the character given were material to the issues. Unless it was error for the tenant to state that the impairment of light and presence of smolte, dué to the maintenance and operation of defendants’ elevated railroad, was. the cause of his moving away, the objection was properly overruled. It is difficult to see what more material evidence could be produced, in support of plaintiff’s claim for damages to rental value, than the "fact that a tenant moved away from the premises, and the foregoing reasons, from his own lips, why he could not st^y. Had the removal been due to some other reason than the presence of the defendants’ railroad, the fact of removal would have been immatérial. Where the motive of a witness, in performing a particular act, or making a particular declaration, becomes a material issue in a case, or reflects important light upon such issue, .he may himself be sworn in regard to it (McKown v. Hunter, 30 N. Y. 625). It is a general rule in criminal cases that where the intent is an essential element to constitute a crime for which a prisoner is on trial, he has the right to testify as to his intent in doing any act which is claimed to prove criminal intent (Kerrains v. People, 60 N. Y. 220). And the same rule applies to civil actions where the motive or intent becomes material.

The questions of fact arising in the case were properly submitted to the jury, who found in favor of the plaintiff a fair preponderance of evidence sustains the verdict, and the amount awarded is not excessive.

It follows, therefore, that the judgment and order appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.

McAdam, P. J,, concurred.

[439]*439Note on the form of objecting to evidence and the EFFECT OF INDEFINITENESS OR GENERALITY IN THE FRAME OF AN OBJECTION.

There was a time within the memory of many now at tlie bar, when the interposing of an objection was held sufficient to make it error to receive illegal evidence ; and the real ground of the objection could practically be reserved by the objector, and first disclosed on error. It was then thought part of the shrewdness of counsel to make masked objections, without pressing them distinctly at the trial, so as to get an adverse ruling and an exception, which might serve as a safeguard to secure a new trial in case of need. The practice which permitted this, assumed that judges and counsel alike understood and remembered the rules of evidence with all their distinctions, and held them to conform each for himself without much warning or help from the other.

For some years, however, the appellate courts have been steadily establishing a different principle, and already the recent course of decision abounds in admonitions that to give' counsel any right to claim on appeal that there was error he must on the trial point specifically to the error, in terms sufficient not only to advise the judge of the precise ground of his contention (case 8), but also to give his adversary such information as to his position, as may enable the adversary to adapt himself to it bv changing the course which provoked the objection (case 20). It is frequently and truly said that a general objection may be sustained as a ground for reversal on appeal, if the ground be such that the objection could not have been obviated, but even this is to be taken with qualification ; for the requirement by the appellate courts of a frank disclosure of the grounds has been carried so far that the' language of the judges in several cases, if not perhaps the actual decision, says that a general objection may be disregarded, because if it had been specific the adverse counsel might have modified or withdrawn his question (case 1).

This points to the fact already well understood by many, • that there is no longer any certain advantage in obscure or masked objections, and that the superior ability of counsel is now shown in complete and ready discernment of all tenable grounds of objection, their frank disclosure, and the clear cut form in which they are specified and put upon the record.

Of course this new method naturally involves the principle that if an objection is specified so as to put it on too [440]*440narrow ground, or only one of several possible grounds, that which is not specified is waived. Some have thought ever since the general principle of disclosure has been established, that to specify that the evidence objected to is incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial “ covers everything.” But a little examination of recent cases will dispel this illusion.

Two qualifications or corollaries of this principle should be noticed before proceeding to some illustrations of its application.

1. A general objection, without more, practically leaves to the discretion of the judge to sustain or overrule the objection.

It is not error to overrule it if he does not see the point ; nor will it be error to overrule it if he thinks the adverse counsel does not see the point. And there is no means of showing an abuse of discretion if he should overrule it merely to favor one party at the expense of .another.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Abb. N. Cas. 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-metropolitan-elevated-railway-co-nysuperctnyc-1893.