78 N.Y.S. 132 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
We are of opinion that this judgment and order cannot stand. The plaintiff complained that while a passenger on the car of the defendant he was assaulted by a conductor. _ The defendant answered in general denial, and for a “second, further and'sep'arate defense” alleged that the plaintiff refused to pay his fare; that thereupon the conductor requested him to leave the car, and that upon refusal, the said conductor “then and there gently laid his hands npon the plaintiff and removed him from the said car, doing him no unnecessary violence, as he lawfully might do; that this act is the act complained of in the Complaint.” The learned court, charging the jury, said: “ Under all those circumstances, taking'all that into account, are you satisfied that the plaintiff was assaulted by th¿ conductor and violently put off the car? I think they admit an assault. Mr. Ridgway (counsel for the defendant): We do not admit it, your honor. The court: They do not admit that they kicked him,' but they do admit an assault at Grand street, and they justify it by saying that he had not paid his fare, and that they put him off. There is not any attempt to show that he had not paid his fare; there is not any attempt to show that he had not a right to ride, and to ride to the end of the road, if he wanted to, and yet they admit that they put him off, and that was an assault., * * * Therefore, I charge you that the plaintiff has a right to recover at least nominal damages, so that it becomes really, a question of how much he is entitled to recover.” At the close of the charge the learned counsel for the defendant excepted to that portion of the charge that the jury must find that there was an assault, and the court answered that the defendant admitted that the condiictor put the plaintiff off the car. Thereupon the learned,counsel for the defend
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As the defendant made a general denial, the plaintiff was bound / to prove his case and could not depend upon any admission in the ’ special plea as if it were made generally in the action. (Troy & Rutland Railroad Company v. Kerr, 17 Barb. 581; Young v. Katz, 22 App. Div. 542, per Bradley, J.; Duschnes v. Heymam, 2 id. 354.) Horeover, the defense did not admit an assault; it stated affirmatively that the conductor, upon refusal of the plaintiff to pay his fare, put the passenger off the car gently and without unnecessary violence, setting forth that this was the act of which the plaintiff complained. If a plaintiff would avail himself of an admission in an answer as a pleading, he must accept it entirely ; he cannot accept a part and reject a part thereof. (Shrady v. Shrady, 42 App. Div. 9, 13; Oakley v. Oakley, 69 Hun, 121; Duschnes v. Heyman, supra; Goodyear v. De La Vergne, 10 Hun, 538; Vanderbilt v. Schreyer, 21 id. 537; Albro v. Figuera, 60 N. Y. 630.) Unless, then, the
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment and" order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.