12 Abb. Pr. 186 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1861
—But two of the exceptions taken upon the reference and to the report of the referee, were argued by the counsel for the appellants, and the others are plainly untenable, and were properly overruled.
' The first of these two, marked “ twelfth exception,” in my opinion, should not be sustained. The facts will not warrant an exception. This court has held that one of the plaintiffs offering himself as a witness, and testifying on behalf of the plaintiffs, and having been asked and answered on his direct examination the question, “ What profits have been realized by your firm on each dozen of the article sold ?” was bound, upon the cross-examination, to have answered the question, “In making up your estimates of profits as you have given, what materials do you calculate the cost upon?” The counsel for the plaintiffs has not seen fit to ask the question formerly put, and the counsel for the defendant, therefore, has had no opportunity to invoke the previous ruling of this court by repeating the question then refused to be answered. We cannot assume that the question would again be put to the witness, or that the circumstances attendant thereat would produce the former result. It cannot be assumed that the witness, if asked, would not have answered the question. If the plaintiffs’ counsel desired to test the soundness of the rule requiring an answer, the plaintiff should have presented himself in a position similar to that he occupied upon his previous examination, and awaited such order or direction as the referee or the court might make in the premises.
It appearing that none of the exceptions can be sustained, they were properly overruled, and the report confirmed.
The order at special term was correct, and must be affirmed, with costs.
Present, Hoffman, Woodruff, Moncrief, Robertson, and White, JJ.