7 Daly 550 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1878
The judgment debtor, Michael Groh, carried on the brewery and saloon business at 60th street and 9th avenue for a long time prior to March 11th, 1875, and on that day all his property on the premises was sold by the sheriff, under six executions issued upon judgments in favor of the German Exchange Bank against him. The plaintiff, Betz, purchased all the property at the sale. The day before the sale Betz proposed to Groh that in case he, Betz, bought the brewery he would hire Groh to run it. Immediately after the sale, by an agreement in writing, Betz hired Groh 'to manage the brewery at a salary of §150 a month, with the proviso that Betz might terminate the hiring by one month’s notice. Groh thereupon entered upon the premises and managed the business; the old checks and bill-heads were used with the word “ agent ” added to Michael Groh’s name; the bank account was kept in the name of “Michael Groh, agent;” but Betz furnished the money and material to carry on the business; attended to and looked after the business every day ; bought the lease of the brewery which Groh held, and which was sold by the sheriff; took a new lease in his own name when that expired in September, 1875; and the business of the concern with the U. S. Revenue department was transacted in his name, and dealers with the concern were informed that he was owner; the premises (vaults) at the foot of 71st street, East River, were hired by Groh in his own name but for Betz, after the sale, and the property stored there was manufactured at the brewery at 9th avenue and 61st street under new arrangements; Groh’s sign, however, remained up over the bar after the sale for about a year; Groh’s name was kept on the wagons, and on the checks as well as the bill-heads ; Groh and his family resided at the premises 61st street and 9th avenue after the sale as they had before it; he was general manager of the brewery after the sale; he “ ran the machine,” to use his own expression, for Betz.
From this, the undisputed evidence in the case, it will be
The first two requests were proper and should have been
This exception seems to be good, and there seems to be no force in respondent’s suggestion that defendant was bound, when the judge stated that he declined to charge any different from what he had charged, to repeat in detail such of his requests as he thought had not been covered by the court’s instructions to the jury. The defendant’s requests were but seven in number aud were made after he had summed up. The point of the first two was distinctly presented, and the court could not have overlooked it. As it was not presented to the jury, and as the learned judge declined to instruct the jury otherwise than as he had already instructed them, it is clear that he deemed the propositions unsound or inapplicable, and did not omit them from his instructions inadvertently. The cases relied on bjr respondent do not touch the case. In Walsh v. Kelly (40 N. Y. 556) the judge had substantially embraced all the points of the requests in his charge. In this case the charge was silent on the question of the statutory presumption. Had the charge touched upon the question in any manner, but not contained the
In Requa v. The City of Rochester (45 N. Y. 129) ten propositions were submitted to the judge, who proceeded to. charge the jury and substantially adopted some of the propositions. A.t the close of the charge the counsel excepted, to the charge in all the particulars specified in those written requests, “so far as the judge had not charged as requested;” this exception was held not to have pointed out in what the counsel conceives the court has erred, and gave no aid for the correction of any - error into which the judge had-fallen. In Zabriskie v. Smith (13 N. Y. 322) “ the charge covered generally the questions of law presented . . . the-, defendant’s counsel, if he conceived that any one or more.of them was not sufficiently answered, should again have called the judge’s attention to it.” In all the other cases cited by. respondent’s counsel, it appears that the exception to the charge was too general, or that the proposition as to which instruction was requested had been touched upon by the court in its charge, and counsel had neglected to point out,. by an additional specific request after the charge, a point; which the court might be reasonably supposed to have overr looked.■
The simple question here is, whether in a ease under the
For the error the judgment should he reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide event.
Charles P. Daly, Ch. J., and Larremore, J., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to. abide event.