95 N.Y.S. 321 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The action is in replevin to recover possession of “ one inserted tooth circular buzz saw, Disston make.’’ The verdict of the jury was in the plaintiff’s favor, but the judgment entered on it has been
It is not sufficient for the purpose of a reversal on the ground, that the result is against the weight of evidence that an appellate court has reached a different conclusion upon the facts from that arrived at by the jury where the evidence is amply sufficient to support the verdict. In order to justify a reversal of . the verdict it should appear that the verdict is against the weight of evidence in the sense that the fair preponderance of proof is really on the side _ of the defeated litigant. It was early held by the Court of Appeals in Burnham v. Butler (31 N. Y. 480) that adjudgment of a justice of the peace should not be reversed by the County Court unless it. clearly appear that the judgment of the justice could not home been justified by the evidence, and that so long as there has been legal evidence on both sides of the question adjudicated upon the County Court should not reverse the judgment, even if it arrive at a conclusion as to the facts different from that adjudged by the justice. The court stated the rule as follows (p.. 481): “ That where, on a trial in a justice’s court, there is evidence on both sides, and even where’ there %s only slight evidence in support of the cause of action on which there is a recovery, the county court is- not authorized to reverse the- judgment,' although such court may arrive at a conclusion upon the facts of the case, or- the weight of evidence, different from that drawn by the- justice.”
In this case the evidence was at least as strong and -convincing in behalf -of the plaintiff as of the contesting defendant. The suit was brought against William Russell, but the respondent, Leonard C. Frear, intervened as a -defendant, and the issue was as to his -alleged -ownership of the saw. Tire plaintiff purchased a farm and implements, including a circular saw, from Sherman N. Haight, on which farm there was a sawmill, occupied and used at the time of the purchase, and for many previous years, by Frear, and the saw was apparently taken by him and used at other places until this action was brought. The plaintiff proved by Haight that he had purchased the saw in October, 1891, from Swift Brothers, of Mill-brook, Dutchess county, for fifty-dollars, and a number of witnesses
It may be said that a verdict either way would be sufficiently supported by the evidence. We think the preponderance is with the plaintiff, but. certainly there is not such a strong preponderance either way as to warrant a reversal as against the weight of evidence under the rule announced and followed in the authorities herein cited.
The judgment of the County Court should be reversed, with costs, and the judgment of the Justice’s Court affirmed.
Bartlett, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment of the County Court of Dutchess county reversed, with costs, and judgment of the Justice’s Court affirmed.