23 N.Y.S. 1008 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1893
Plaintiff sued to recover the value of an overcoat, which he claimed was purloined from the room assigned to him for the purpose of disrobing, while a.guest at defendant’s Russian and Turkish bath establishment in the city of New York. It seems to have been conceded on the trial that plaintiff left defendant’s establishment, several hours after he entered it, without an overcoat answering the description of the one he complained to have been taken from his room; and that he had it with him when he entered the room appears very clearly from his testimony, which is amply corroborated by that of his witness Goodwin. An effort was made on defendant’s part to discredit plaintiff and Goodwin by the testimony of several of defendant’s witnesses to the effect that when they entered defendant’s establishment both plaintiff and Goodwin were in such a state of inebriety as to be wholly unconscious of each other’s dress or appearance. A second effort on the part of defendant was to show that the room assigned to plaintiff was so constructed as to admit of no means of ingress except by the door of which plaintiff was furnished the key. Upon the conflict of evidence which ensued in both particulars the record presents no such preponderance in defendant’s favor as will enable us to say that the trial justice’s adverse determination was error. From the very nature of the accommodations afforded by defendant’s establishment it seems entirely clear that, while plain
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed.