75 N.Y.S. 90 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
This action is brought against the principal and surety to collect the penalty on a bond given on the application of appellant Furthmann for a liquor tax certificate, authorizing him to traffic in liquors on premises No. 2158 Eighth avenue in the city of New York for one year from the 1st day of May, 1898. The application was granted.
The complaint charged and evidence was offered by the plaintiff tending to show violations of the Liquor Tax Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 112, as amended) on Sunday, August 28, and Sunday, September 4, 1898, as follows: (1) In selling liquor in the basement of the premises under the barroom with which there was an open connecting stairway; (2) in having door from street to said basement unlocked ; and (3) in permitting persons, not members of the family of the licensee, to enter said basement where liquor was being sold. Other violations of the Liquor Tax Law on Sunday, September 11, 1898, were charged and supported by evidence, as follows: (1) In selling liquor in the barroom ; (2) in having the door from the street to the barroom unlocked; (3) in permitting others than members of his family to enter the barroom; and (4) in having a partition across the barroom in such manner as to obstruct the view of persons in the barroom from the street in front.
At the close of the evidence the defendants moved for a dismissal of the complaint, and upon their motion being denied, plaintiff moved for a direction of a verdict. The record shows that the court granted the motion on the ground that the evidence as to selling in the basement on August twenty-eighth and September fourth was uncontroverted. ■ After the intention of the court to direct a verdict was announced, but before the verdict was taken or entered, the defendants’ counsel asked to go to the jury upon the questions with reference to the alleged violations of the Liquor Tax Law and specifically upon the credibility of the special agents who gave the only testimony tending to show such violations, These' requests were denied, and exceptions taken.
The requests to go to the jury - were timely made, and if there was error in their refusal, a new trial must be granted. (Second National Bank v. Weston, 161 N. Y. 525.)
The verdict cannot be sustained on account of the alleged viola
The licensee' also testified that he entered into an agreement in writing with Huegel concerning the basement; that he did not have the writing; that he turned it over to the tenant who succeeded him who was at the time of the trial a resident of Yermont and absent from the State. He was then asked to give the contents of that paper.. This was objected to' on the ground that it called for .secondary evidence and the objection vras sustained.. The licensee was then asked if he received any money from Huegel in 1898 for rent of the basement. That was objected to generally. The objection was sustained and an exception taken.
We think it was error to exclude the evidence ténding to show .that the basement had been sublet and was in the possession of Huegel as the licensee’s tenant as that would tend to show that Furthmann was not responsible for sales made in the basement. As the lease was only collaterally involved, secondary evidence of its contents was admissible.
The respondent seeks to uphold the verdict principally upon other grounds than those assigned by the court, and the rule is invoked that the judgment may be sustained upon any ground appearing in the record that would have justified the action of the court. (Scott v. Morgan, 94 N. Y. 508; Marvin v. Universal Life Insurance Co., 85 id. 278.)
It is now well settled that a conflict in the evidence upon a material point requires the submission of a case to a jury.
For these reasons the judgment should he reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event.
Yak Brunt, P. J., - Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event.