2 E.D. Smith 378 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1854
The inquiry into the usual or uniform practice of the defendant in regard to paying commissions, standing by itself, was, I think, clearly inadmissible. No such private practice could affect the plaintiff’s title to recover what his services were worth, unless it was shown that the plaintiff rendered his services with notice of the plaintiff’s usage in his business of a character so explicit as to warrant a finding—in the absence of any express agreement—that he assented to such usage, and rendered his services in view of the compensation which such usage would afford him.
The inquiry, which evidence shall be first given, appertaining merely to the order of proof, rests in the discretion of the court. It may often be perfectly easy for the defendant to show that the plaintiff, by previous dealings or otherwise, was well apprised of the course of the defendant’s business, and so had notice.
And although, in this particular case, the most convenient course might have been to prove the usage first and the notice afterwards, we cannot, I think, say that the justice erred in excluding evidence of the usage, when the defendant neither offered to prove that the plaintiff had notice, nor gave any intimation, whatever, of a design to bring notice of such usage home to the plaintiff in any manner. So far as we can gather from
Judgment affirmed.