60 A.D. 191 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The plaintiff in this action alleges that the injury to the plaintiff was caused “ by reason of the carelessness, negligence and neglect of the defendant, its servants or agents.” There was no proof of any mismanagement of the car, or of any negligent performance by a servant of the defendant of any act which it was its duty to. do in transporting the plaintiff on the car. The undisputed evidence was that the plaintiff had an altercation with the conductor; that he tried to pull the bell to stop the car when the conductor, willfully and of his own malice pushed'him off the car. The evidence was given without objection, but as it constituted the very transaction by reason of which the plaintiff claimed that the defendant was guilty of negligence, no objection could have been successfully interposed to it.
There is no inherent power in a court to amend pleadings upon a trial. All its authority in that regard is derived from section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by which the court is permitted upon the trial, in furtherance of justice, 'to amend any pleading where the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense by conforming the pleading to the facts proved. Unless ' this act of the court can be sustained under the authority given in that portion of the section quoted above, the ruling complained of was error. There can be no doubt of the rule that the power of the court within this section is limited to an amendment Which does not change substantially the claim made in the complaint. (Southwick v. First National Bank, 84 N. Y. 420, 429; Dexter v. Ivins, 133 id. 551, 552; Zoller v. Kellogg, 66 Hun, 194.) If the facts proved had constituted merely an immaterial variance from those alleged in the complaint, no exception could have been taken to what was done, but the change in the complaint went further than to correct an immaterial variance. The scope of the original allegation in the complaint was that simply of a negligent act on the part of one of the defendant’s servants. That meant simply that in the performance of the duty towards its passengers which it must devolve upon its servants, the defendant had failed ; but, as proved, the act was not a failure to perform a duty which the defendant had placed upon its servants, but a willful and unnecessary act done by a servant entirely outside of the duty with which the defendant had
Yan Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., ■concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.