Beatty v. McCutcheon

200 A.D. 869 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs. The plaintiff is given twenty days in which to amend his complaint, on payment of costs. We are of opinion that the complaint does not state the facts constituting the causo of action. If negligence is a conclusion of fact, a cause of action may be stated by the use of that word alone; for we are admonished not to plead evidence (Civil Practice Act, § 241), and the ultimate fact should be pleaded. But negligence of a defendant is a violation of the duty which arises from certain stated facts, and, therefore, we think the defendant’s acts should be pleaded from which the conclusion of negligence may be drawn. If the acts or omissions of the defendant are pleaded, then we think they may'be characterized as negligent to give them the quality of actionable acts. In this case there is in the complaint no intimation of what it is proposed to prove the defendant did or omitted to do, and, therefore, the complaint is insufficient. The decision in Robinson v. Ocean Steamship Co. (162 App. Div. 169) is correct in its reasoning and conclusion, but that case refers to the question of contributory negligence which, as distinguished from the negligence of a defendant, is a conclusion of fact. Blackmar, P. J., Rich, Kelly, Jayeox and Manning, JJ., concur.

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