32 Barb. 480 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
By the Court,
Inasmuch as no motion for a new trial has been made upon the judge’s minutes, or at the special term upon the weight of evidence, or for excessive damages, but the case has been ordered to be heard in the first instance at the general term, we are restricted to the examination of exceptions. And of these none appear to have been taken to the admission or rejection of evidence. We must look, therefore, to the decision of the judge upon the motion for a nonsuit, and upon the charge and refusals to charge.
The defendant moved for a nonsuit on two grounds. 1. On the ground that there was no evidence to support the complaint, and none to go to the jury, upon which the defendant could be made liable. 2. On the ground that the defendant was acting as a public officer in the discharge of his duty, and was not liable, under the facts proved, for the injury sustained by the plaintiff. These grounds are stated in the
Certainly such a motion does not present the question that the action should have been case for the defendant’s negligence, instead of trespass for a direct injury. So objection whatever was taken to the form of the pleadings nor to the admissibility of evidence under them. If the objection had been taken, the pleadings would probably have been amended on the spot, had an amendment been deemed necessary. These formal objections must not be listened to, unless distinctly made.
Sor, if the motion were distinctly and specifically presented on the merits, ought the nonsuit, in my opinion, to have been granted. There was at least enough to go to the jury upon the question whether proper care had been taken in examining the muskets to see if they were unloaded; upon the question whether the defendant should have ordered the soldiers to fire in the direction of so large a body of spectators ; or if so, whether the angle of elevation at which the guns were ordered to be fired, should not have been higher. There was therefore no legal error in refusing to nonsuit.
As to the charge, the substance of the legal propositions contained in it was, I think, as favorable to the defendant as the law would warrant. It held the defendant free from responsibility unless he had been guilty of negligence. It
As to the refusals to charge: 1. Taken in connection with the facts of the case and with the residue of the charge; the judge properly refused to charge in an unqualified form the defendant’s first request that an action cannot be maintained against a public officer for an act done by him in the execution of his office and within the scope of his general authority. The judge in substance charged that proposition elsewhere, with the qualification (a proper one) that proper care should be observed in the performance of the act. 2. The judge in substance complied with the defendant’s third and fourth requests, to wit, that the proof must show neglect of duty on the part of the defendant himself which occasioned the accident, and that if the colonel took the usual precautions or gave the proper orders, he was not responsible for the carelessness or negligence of his inferior officers. The request was faulty in this: usual precautions, unless they were prudent or requisite precautions, would not absolve the defendant from responsibility. The judge charged right in this particular. 3. The sixth request—to wit, that the injury was not sustained by any act, order or intent of the defendant—was properly refused upon the ground that it was a question of fact proper to be submitted, upon the evidence, to the jury. 4. The seventh and eighth requests, so far as they declare it to have been the duty of the defendant to exercise his regiment in the use of their fire arms, with ammunition, and that in giving the order to fire (after proper precautions) the colonel only discharged a legal duty within the scope of his authority, were essentially and indeed expressly complied with by the judge. So far as the 8th request declares that the firing of the regi
Gould, Hogeboom and Peckham, Justices.]
I have thus reviewed at length all the legal propositions taken by the defendant upon the trial, and am not able to see that any substantial error was committed by the judge-in disposing of them, and I am therefore of opinion that a new trial should be denied.
Judgment accordingly.