Werner v. Hearst

76 A.D. 375

This text of 76 A.D. 375 (Werner v. Hearst) 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
Werner v. Hearst, 76 A.D. 375 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J.:

The complaint alleged the following facts: On May 14, 1897, the defendant was owner and publisher of a newspaper, and in and; about the business of distributing and transporting, employed a wagon known as No. 47 and a driver named Polhemus. On that day the plaintiff was riding a bicycle on oné of the city streets, when the wagon was negligently driven into collision with the [377]*377plaintiff, whereby she suffered great bodily injuries which incapacitate her from pursuing her natural and accustomed vocation and from child-bearing. At the trial the court allowed an amendment alleging that the plaintiff was a counselor at. law and a lecturer in a law school, and that by the accident she was incapacitated from pursuing her said occupation, had been subjected to great expense for medical treatment, and that her disability would be permanent.

Defendant denied that on May 14, 1897, he was owner or publisher of a newspaper or that in or about the business of distributing or transporting it he employed or was the owner of the vehicle No. 47, or the employer of Polhemus. Defendant’s brief contains the statement that issue was joined on the question of the ownership of the newspaper and of the wagon and of the employment of the driver, and also on the genuineness of the plaintiff’s alleged injuries and it makes no argument as to the negligence of either party, so the question whether the negligence of the driver caused the injuries, and whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence need not be considered, leaving for discussion only the question of the ownership of the newspaper and vehicle, the employment of the driver by the defendant and the genuineness and extent of the plaintiff’s injuries. The plaintiff recovered a verdict of §25,000, and the defendant appeals.

The first question relates to the ownership of the newspaper and wagon and the employment of the driver. At the close of the entire evidence the defendant moved for a dismissal of the complaint on the ground that there was no evidence showing that the defendant was the owner of the wagon or the employer of the driver, and as the court denied the motion and submitted the question to the jury, it is well to state with considerable detail the facts proven, in order to ascertain whether or not there was sufficient, evidence to support the verdict.

It is claimed by the plaintiff that while the business was conducted nominally under the cover of corporate forms, the defendant, was the actual proprietor, being the owner of all the stock except some nominal holdings by his employees to qualify them to hold corporate office; that he directed and controlled the business and the policy of the several newspapers hereinafter referred to, and was in fact the owner at the time of the accident.

[378]*378The evidence discloses the following facts: Albert Pulitzer and others, in 1882, under the Manufacturing Corporation Act of February 17, 1848, filed a certificate of incorporation of “ The Morning Journal Association,” the object of which'was stated to be to print, publish and sell a newspaper under the name óf The Morning Journal. In 1888, Watkins and others filed another certificate of incorporation of the “ Star Company,” the object being stated to be the printing, publishing and selling of newspapers. On March 30, 1897, Clark and others filed another certificate of incorporation of the “ New York Evening Journal Publishing Company,” the object of which was to print, publish and distribute a newspaper or newspapers, and to buy, acquire and deal in all articles necessary to print, publish and distribute the same.

Upon the sides of the wagon which collided with the plaintiff were painted the words “Hew York Journal” and “Humber 47.” It was one of twenty purchased from Studebaker by a written order headed. “ The Journal Circulation Department ”. and signed “ The Hew York Journal, per S. J. Richardson, Circulation Manager,” and paid for by a check headed “Hew York Journal” and signed “Hew York Journal, by.C. M. Palmer.” Mr. Earl, cashier of the Hassau Bank, testified that the Hew York Journal had kept an account in that bank for about four years. (The trial began April 4, 1901.) The money was drawn on checks signed in print “ Hew York Journal,” and in writing underneath by H. M. Bicknell and E. H. Clarke, or W. Thompson. Heither the defendant, the-Morning Journal Association, the Star Company, -nor the Evening Journal Publishing Company had any other account in the bank. The method of dealing with the bank account is shown by several letters. One is dated March 5, 1897, addressed to the Hassau Bank, and reads:

“Regarding the account of the Morning Journal appearing in your bank, to the credit of which we wish tó renew deposits and accounts, will you kindly honor such accounts when signed as per margin. Yours very truly,
“ C. M. PALMER, Treasurer.
“By NEW YORK JOURNAL.
“By HENRY M. BICKNELL, Accountant. “By W. B. PALMER, Cashier "

[379]*379The date of the first deposit was March 10, 1897. Two subsequent letters headed “New York Journal, W. R. Hearst,” and dated respectively November 22, 1898, and May 19, 1900, and signed “Henry M. Bicknell, Cashier, N. Y. Journal,” changed the required signatures in some respects. In September,'1900, a fund for the relief of the Galveston flood sufferers was instituted, of which the defendant was treasurer. Three checks are in evidence, given by subscribers to this fund to the order of “New York Journal ” and one to the order of “ Wm. R. Hearst.” These checks were indorsed “ Pay to the Nassau Bank of N. Y., or order, W. R. Hearst, N. Y. Journal Galveston Relief Fund,” and were deposited in the bank account already referred to.. A copy of the New York Evening Journal, dated May 14, 1897, was also put in evidence, on the first and last pages of which were the words “New York Journal. Evening. New York, Friday, May 14, 1897. The Evening Journal, W. R. Hearst.”

There was also in evidence a certificate of the State Comptroller that there was no record in his office of reports filed by the Morning Journal Association, the New York Evening Journal Publishing Company or the Star Company, from November, 1895, to March, 1901, also a certificate of the county clerk of New York county that there was not filed in his office up to January, 1901, any annual report of the Star Company; that annual reports of the Morning Journal were filed in January, 1895, 1896, 1901, and of the New York Evening Journal Publishing Company in January, 1901.

The plaintiff contended that this was sufficient evidence to support her claim that the defendant was the actual owner of the several newspapers and of the wagon, No. 47, and employer of its driver. Neither the defendant nor the driver, who was present in court at the trial, nor Palmer, nor Bicknell, was called by the defendant as a witness. But Mr. Carvalho, who was one of the incorporators of the “New York Evening Journal Publishing Company,” was called by the defendant. He testified that he was the “ general manager of the New York Journal ” and Das Morgen Journal; that his original connection with the Morning Journal Association was made in April, 1896,; that it was engaged in printing the Morning Journal, the New York Morning Journal and [380]*380Das Morgen Journal; that the New York Evening Journal

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.D. 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/werner-v-hearst-nyappdiv-1902.