107 N.Y. 664 | NY | 1887
The following is the opinion:
“ The- defendant objects to the recovery in this action on two grounds: First. That there was not evidence sufficient to go to the jury to show that there would have been any profits from the business of the firm from March to the end of the year in case the partnership had not been dissolved. Second. That there was error in the reception of a copy of a letter written by defendant to one Perot. , ,
“ In regard to the first we think there was evidence sufficient to go to the jury upon the question of future profits. The plaintiff himself while on the stand swore that the business
“ The plaintiff also produced and read in evidence what he claimed was a copy of a letter written by the defendant to a man named E. L. Perot, dated the 19th of April, 1880, in which letter he stated that the books of the firm showed a profit of four hundred and odd dollars per month; that he was settling up the accounts and hoped it would prove what the books showed. The plaintiff also proved that on the first of January, after the concern had been in operation two
“ This substantially was the character of the evidence given by the plaintiff for the purpose of furnishing a basis for the jury to come to a conclusion as to the amount of damages which he sustained by reason of a dissolution of the partnership before the time agreed upon.
“ A motion for a nonsuit on the gixmnd, among others, that no sufficient evidence had been given upon which to base any claim to recover for prospective or future profits, was denied by the court.
“ The defendant, in order to meet this evidence, proved by an expert who had made an examination of the books (there being no substantial dispute but what the books had been properly and accurately kept), that when the statement was made of the condition of the concern on the 1st of January, 1880, after it had been in existence for two months, and which statement showed an apparent profit of $1,600; that it appeared (as already stated) that such ■ profit was based upon the assumption that the accounts which appeared as outstanding were all good and collectible. Another statement was made, as from the books, up to the 2d of March, 1880, in which it appeared that the profits for the two months from January to March, based upon the same assumption of the collectibility of the accounts, amounted to only ninety-seven dollars. The expert further testified from an examination of
“ The explanation as to how there could have been a profit of $1,600 on the first of January, and of $97 on the first of March for the two months immediately preceding, and yet when the firm was dissolved and proceedings taken to wind it up that a loss should be the result, is made to appear by the evidence on the part of the plaintiff. The proof on the part of the defendant simply showed that the accounts had not all been collected at the time when the expert witness examined the books. But there was no evidence that the accounts themselves were not against solvent debtors who would have paid if the business had continued. The plaintiff showed that by suddenly dissolving the firm and breaking up the business in March, after its existence of but four months, losses occurred to the firm on that account. It would seem that the business of the firm was made up of small accounts against a large number of customers, and that a sudden dissolution and going out of business had the effect upon their various customers of making them negligent in paying the firm debts, and the amounts in each case were too small to make it worth while to attempt to collect them by legal proceedings. Hence one' source of loss on winding up the concern.
“ It would seem also that there had been a loss upon the sale of the personal property of the firm, including the machinery, and quite large expenses had been incurred in fitting up the store which had gone into the machinery account, and in closing the firm business at the end of four months, the profits realized had not been sufficient to counter
“ This evidence in relation to the firm having realizes any profits 'from their business during the four months is only material as bearing upon the possibilities or probabilities of the same fortune attending it during the eight succeeding months. It is not as a measure of damages that the evidence is given, but only as a fact from which inferences might be drawn by the jury as to what was reasonable and probable, about the amount of profits to be realized from the- business during the eight succeeding months had the firm continued business. If, as matter of fact, there had been a loss during those four months, if there were evidence satisfactorily explaining such loss and also showing an inherent probability or almost certainty of a change in the future, and that the succeeding months would have .resulted in a business profit, the plaintiff would still have been entitled to a verdict.
u Upon the whole we think there was evidence sufficient to go to the jury upon the question of probability of profits
“ Whether there was error or not in the admission of a copy of the letter, as claimed by the defendant’s counsel, for the reason that a sufficient ground was not laid for the admission of secondary evidence of its contents, we think it perfectly plain that no harm could have resulted from its admission. We do not decide that it was error to admit it, but assuming error we say no harm could have been caused by it. The letter simply stated that the books showed a profit of four hundred and odd dollars per month. The books were subsequently put in evidence by the defendant and evidence was given on his part proving that the books did show a profit of that average amount per month, upon the assumption already stated of the collectibility of the accounts, and of course without considering the possible loss arising from a sale of the firm’s property on a premature winding up of the concern. It is evident that the defendant in writing the letter understood exactly that the profit was based wholly upon this assumption of collectibility, which fact explains the expression used in the letter, ‘ I am settling up the accounts and hope it will prove what the books show.’ Any one reading it would see that the profits appearing from the books were based upon the assumption that the accounts should prove collectible.
íc There is nothing else material in the letter. The expression used therein that ‘one thing is sure the capital is always intact ’ is obviously but the expression of an opinion, and is followed up by the further statement that ‘a personal investigation of the whole matter would I think be more satisfactory to you.’
“ Neither of the grounds argued by the defendant’s counsel is sufficient upon which to reverse the judgment, and it should therefore be affirmed with costs.”
reads for affirmance.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.