26 A.D. 101 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff has appealed from an order denying an application made by it to refer the issues in this action to a referee for trial, and urges in support of its appeal that the court below erroneously applied the decisions of the Court of Appeals as to the character of actions which the courts have the power to refer. This question is one that has been much discussed in this State in view of the provision of the State Constitution of 1777, that “ trial by jury in all cases in which it hath heretofore been Used in the colony of New York, shall be established and remain inviolate forever ” (§ 41), which has been continued in all the revisions of our Constitution since that time. The latest case in which the Court of Appeals has discussed the question is that of Steck v. C. F. & I. Co. (142 N. Y. 236). All the former cases were reviewed in tlie very able dis
An examination -of the complaint in this case shows that it alleges causes of action which are within the class in which the defendant had a right to a trial by jury. The action is brought to recover upon a contract, whereby the plaintiff agreed to furnish to the defendant all the metal work- for the light and fog signal house at Spring Point Ledge, Portland harbor, Me., in accordance with the specifications for the building of such lighthouse, -which specifications are made a part of the contract, for a specific sum of money, with a certain time fixed in the contract, and with a provision that should the defendant be subjected to- a penalty under the terms of his contract for delay in the erection and completion • of the said lighthouse, then the plaintiff would be responsible for so much of said penalty as should be caused by a failure' on its part to do the work which it agreed to do within the time specified, and in such event the total of such amount was to be deducted by the defendant from the payment to be made by him to the plaintiff under the terms of the contract. .
A bill of particulars was furnished by the plaintiff setting forth the items of .the fourth cause of action. As to the first cause of action, the amount payable under the contract was stated, with one cash payment credited. Under the second cause of action there.was a statement of items of material and labor for replacing the lower part of a caisson which was destroyed, consisting of seven items aggregating $1,942.89.' The third cause of action was for a delay of eighty-four days at $10 per .day, and the fourth cause of action consisted of two items — $8 insurance, and $112 for demurrage.
We have thus an action brought to recover, upon several causes of action, a definite sum of money under a contract, and for damages for a breach by the defendant of his contract with the plaintiff; and while the cause of action to recover damages for the breach of the contract consists of several items of damage, the cause of action is entire, and is not upon an account. The cause of action involved here is to recover the damage sustained by a breach of a contract by the defendant, and the fact that the items going to make up the amount of damage that the plaintiff sustained are numerous, does not change the character of the action. There is one contract made by the defendant which it is alleged he has broken. The amount which he is liable for is the amount of damage that the plaintiff sustained in consequence of that breach; and the fact that the items which go to make up such damage are numerous does not make the action one upon an account. As to the other three causes
• We think, therefore, that the court was clearly right in holding that the action was not one which, in its nature, was referable. It' is proper, however, that we should again state that it is a very excep- ■ tional case which would justify us in reviewing the exercise of the discretion of the court below in refusing to refer .the issues in an action. The trial by jury in a common-law action is, under our system, the normal method of settling the issues of fact. The court is only justified in ordering a reference in such aii action where it clearly appears that, in consequence of the nature of the proof necessary to sustain the plaintiff’s cause of action, a trial by jury is not practicable; or when the plaintiff’s cause of action is based, upon an account involving many distinct items, each of which has to be proved ; and where it is impracticable for a jury to scrutinize the evidence offered to establish each particular item of the account. Where an action is brought to recover for goods sold and delivered, which include many separate sales at different- times, each one of them must be- proved, and the value of the goods sold ascertained, it is .quite apparent that a trial by jury would be impracticable, as it would be impossible for the jury to carry in their minds the evidence as to the sale and delivery of each particular lot of goods sold and the value .thereof. Many other instances conld be adduced of a cause of action which involves the ■ examination of an account, with the proof of many items, when each item must be proved as a separate fact; but where one of the parties to an action insists upon ■the right to have his case tried in the ordinary way by a jury, the trial court should not refuse such a trial and insist upon, sending the case to a referee, unless it clearly appears that,, because of tlie nature
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Yan Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements