28 N.Y.S. 17 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1894
The complaint was sufficient in alleging that the wagon belonged to defendants, and was driven by one of their
As to the exceptions to rulings upon evidence, in some cases the grounds of objection were not stated, and the exceptions are of no avail. Cruikshank v. Gordon, 118 N. Y. 178, 23 N. E. 457. As to the objection to the question calling for the conversation of the plaintiff:’s witness Stone with the alleged superintendent of the defendants, it was put upon the ground that the conversation was in the absence of the defendants; not that the person in question had no authority to act for them. When the conversation was given, and it appeared that the alleged superintendent had impliedly admitted that the accident had been reported to him by some person in defendants’ employ who had charge of the horses and wagons, a motion was made to strike it out upon the ground that it was a conversation with an alleged servant of defendants, in their absence; not upon the ground that the servant had no power to bind his master by such admissions. Besides, the motion was to strike out all the testimony, and it did not consist wholly of admissions. The alleged superintendent directed that the doctor call and see the boy. This was an act which might have been within his authority; and the motion to strike out, as we have seen, was not based upon want of authority. The' exception to the ruling made upon an objection which did not point out the error is not available. Sterrett v. Bank, 122 N. Y. 659, 25 N. E. 913.
There is no force in the objection that the minutes of the former trial were improperly admitted. They were proved without objection by the testimony of defendants’ counsel. There was no objection that the proper foundation for their admission in impeachment of defendants’ witness had not been laid by first questioning the witness as to his testimony upon the former trial. The judge’s statement that they were admitted to impeach the witness was not excepted to. The exception was as to the admission of the minutes, and the attention of the court was not called to the point now made, —that the reasons given for admitting the paper might have influenced the jury.
On the main issue in the case—that of negligence—there seems to have been sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the question both of the driver’s negligence and the alleged contributory negligence of the plaintiff. Here was a boy of 12 years of age, carrying a load of empty cigar boxes, and about to cross the street. When he left the