Vroman v. Kryn

86 N.Y.S. 94
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedJanuary 19, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 86 N.Y.S. 94 (Vroman v. Kryn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vroman v. Kryn, 86 N.Y.S. 94 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinions

GIEDERSEEEVE, J.

The parties, at the commencement of the trial, consented to the entry in the minutes of the following stipulation as to the facts of the case, viz.:

“It is stipulated that a lot of diamonds, on the 29th of September, 1902, belonging to the defendants, were delivered to the plaintiff for the purpose of being polished by the plaintiff. On the return of the diamonds polished, plaintiff would be entitled to receive, for his work returned and services, the sum of $124.36, less $12.94 paid by plaintiff for the use of a bench, to be deducted from the $124.36. Plaintiff did return the diamonds polished, save and except one stone, of the value of $85. Plaintiff claims that he is relieved of this liability of $85, and will adduce proof in support of the claim. Defendant charges, and will adduce proof substantiating his claim, that plaintiff is properly chargeable with the’$85. That is the contention and issue involved in this suit. There is no dispute, in any event, that plaintiff would be entitled to a judgment of $26.42; being the difference between $85 and $124.36, less $12.94.”

The plaintiff’s counsel thereupon stated as follows:

“I do not want it to be assumed or inferred from that stipulation that I concede it was any part of the contract, when the plaintiff obtained the stones, that he was to be paid only if they were returned.”

Plaintiff was then asked by his counsel:

“Q. What has become of this one stone, which was referred to, which was not delivered to defendants? A. I cannot state. It is impossible to tell, if one is thrown off the wheel—to say where it was. Of course, if I found it, then, of course, it would be returned. I did not find it, and cannot tell where it is. I discovered its loss the very moment it flew out of the dub.”

He then went on to illustrate the working of a “dub” in polishing diamonds, and endeavored to show that the loss of the diamond was not owing to his own negligence. One E. Polak was next called by plaintiff, and this witness stated that he was present at the time of the loss of the diamond while it was being polished by plaintiff. His testimony was as follows:

“Q. What did you see? A. I set a stone. I have seen them setting the stone in the dub—putting them on the wheel—and seeing the grinding stone; and all I know was, the stone flew away, but afterwards I do not know anything.”

He also states that he saw the dub after the stone had “flown away,” and that “the tooth was broken.”

The plaintiff swears that, when he started to turn the stone in the dub, the tooth of the dub was not broken. He also swears that the style of dub used was inferior to the “solder dub,” but that defendants required him to use that particular kind of dub in preference to the solder. His testimony is as follows:

“One of the teeth of this fork [in the dub] broke, and the stone flew away. This dub—the one in which the stone in question was—I obtained from Kryn & Waters [defendants] on the day I used it, and I used it in exactly the same condition in which I got it.' Q. Was there anything on the dub or teeth to indicate that the tooth might break? A. I looked at them every time before I used them, but could not detect any flaw.”

It appears from the plaintiff’s testimony, which is apparently uncontradicted on this point, that the method of polishing diamonds is to insert the stone in a sort of vise, which the plaintiff calls a “dub,” in which it is held against a revolving wheel, making about 2,500 to [96]*963,500 revolutions a minute; and plaintiff swears, as we have seen, that the tooth of the dub in question, which plaintiff received from defendants for the purpose of polishing the diamonds in question, broke, and that,the diamond “flew away,” and was never recovered, although plaintiff looked for it, as he says, “every day for eight days until 8 o’clock at night.”

The defendant Waters denied, in a general way, that plaintiff was compelled to use a particular kind of dub. His testimony on this point runs as follows, viz.:

“Q. Do you direct any of the polishers to use this particular dub? A. No, sir; I never will take that responsibility—to say something like that.”

Previous to this he says:

“Every tool belongs to the polisher. Q. They bring their own tools? A. Yes; dubs and everything. Q. Mr. VToman [plaintiff] has testified he is obliged to use this screw dub. A. I never did. Q. Did you give him that? A. In a certain way.”

He then went on to explain that he had got a number of the dubs at a reduced rate, which the polishers could use if they wished to hire-them from defendants. He is asked:

“Q. You have a number of these dubs at your place of business? A. Yes. Q. So that the polishers, if they want to use them, may do so? A. That is right. Q. By the Court: You got it [the ‘dub’], and then, if they want it, they can hire it from you? A. That is right.”

The plaintiff testified that accidents of the kind that resulted in the loss of the diamond were quite common in the use of the style of dub which plaintiff claims defendants required him to use, but that it was very rare for such accidents to occur in the use of the solder dub. Plaintiff further claims that defendants had all the solder dubs taken out of their place of business, and, as we have said, that their polishers were obliged to use the dubs of the kind that plaintiff was operating at the time of the loss of the diamond. The defendant Waters, as we have just seen, states that, although these latter dubs were in the defendants’ place of business, still the polishers were not obliged to use them, but could hire them, if they so desired, and that they generally “bring their own tools—dubs and everything.” To use the solder dub, it was, apparently, necessary to have an assistant to the polisher, called a “setter” or “versteller”; and, in his endeavor to show that defendants would not permit the use of the solder dub in their place of business, plaintiff’s counsel asked defendant Waters on cross-examination:

“Q. What became of these setters that were in your place of business a couple of years ago? A. I had nothing to do with setters. Q. You say the setters were in the employ of the polishers? A. Yes, sir. Q. You had nothing to do with them? A. No, sir. Q. Is it not a fact that about a year ago you announced to the Diamond Setters’ Union that you would not allow a setter in your place any more? A. No; it is not .a fact. Q. You did not say anything at that time to any person? A. No. Q. Of course, you do not hold any stock or have any interest in this Diamond Dub Company? A. No. Q. You have not any? A. No. Q. Any member of your firm has? A. Yes; it belonged to me about four years ago. Q. This entire patent belonged to you? A. Three or four years ago. But I never made a penny out of it. Q. The old-fashioned dub [the solder], the diamond is always fixed by a setter, [97]*97is it not? A. It cannot be otherwise. Q. I am asking you yes or no—what they call a ‘versteller’ ? A. Some polishers do it now without a versteller.”

The Diamond Dub Company above mentioned was apparently the maker of the dubs which plaintiff claims the defendants required him to use.

To rebut this testimony of Waters, plaintiff called the witness Benjamin, an officer of the Diamond Workers’ Union, and asked him as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.Y.S. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vroman-v-kryn-nyappterm-1904.