195 N.Y. 273 | NY | 1909
In the city of Mortli Tonawanda there is a highway known as Wheatfield street, which runs substantially east and west, and crosses at grade the tracks of the Mew York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, which run practically north and south. The Lehigh Valley railroad uses these tracks in its traffic between Buffalo and Miagara Falls. On the 2d day of October, 1905, the plaintiff was driving across these tracks on Wheatfield street, and collided with a south-bound Lehigh Valley train. The crossing was equipped with gates operated by compressed air from a tower maintained by the Mew York Central Railroad
We think the exception to this statement and ruling was not well taken. The court had previously charged all that the defendants were fairly entitled to upon that subject. Counsel in their zeal then pursued the subject somewhat hypercritically and they really injected into the case the unnecessary colloquy as to “ indirect testimony.” Quite apart from this technical view of the matter, however, there was no error or impropriety in leaving it for the jury to decide whether the gateman’s sudden and complete deafness within a month after the accident was consistent with his possession of an unimpaired sense of hearing at the time of the accident. Although he was not a party to the action he had testified to a fact which, if material to the issue, was so unusual in the natural course of events as to invite inquiry. The jury had the undoubted right to weigh the testimony of the witnesses in this behalf for the purpose of testing the truthfulness of the rest of the gateman’s story. (Elwood v. West. Un. Tel. Co., 45 N. Y. 549.)
There is another exception in the case, however, which presents a much more.serious question. That is the exception taken to the ruling under which the court admitted evidence of the income, profit or earnings which the plaintiff had derived from his business during the three years preceding the accident. In the interrogatories of plaintiff’s counsel, the plaintiff’s revenue from this source was called “earnings,” but that is mere nomenclature which cannot be permitted to determine the inquiry whether the plaintiff’s income had in fact been of such a chai’acter as to make it a proper element of the damages which he claimed the right to recover. As bearing upon that branch
The latest case in which this court has had occasion to apply this rule is that of Weir v. Union Ry. Co. (188 N. Y. 416). That case may be fairly said to be the antithesis of the Kronold case, for it furnishes a very pointed illustration of the opposite extreme of the rule. There the plaintiff had rented a small place in which he established an oyster stand and lunch room. The supplies purchased and sold by the plaintiff varied in amount to such an extent that occasional changes had to be made in the number of persons employed as waiters and assistants. Sometimes there were two or three, and at other times only one. The plaintiff’s income consisted of the difference between the gross receipts and the running-expenses of the establishment, and it fluctuated from week to week. There the trial court received evidence of the plaintiff’s weekly, profits, and the ruling was approved by the Appellate Division. When the case reached this court, however, the judgment was reversed upon the ground that the evidence was incompetent. That case is strikingly apposite to the discussion here, because it clearly shows that profits are not earnings simply because a business is very small, any more than earnings are necessarily to be considered as profits because they happen to be large. In other words, it is the character of the business or occupation and of the income derived therefrom that must determine the admissibility of such evidence in this class of actions. If the asserted loss consists of profits which are essentially the uncertain and fluctuating increment of invested capital, proof thereof is inadmissible no matter how small it may be; and, conversely, if the loss is due to the
In the light of these distinctions the case at bar is easily classified. We think the evidence of the plaintiff’s income from his business for the three years preceding the accident in which he suffered his injuries was incompetent because it related to profits depending in considerable measure upon capital invested in business, as distinguished from personal earnings. We have said that the evidence upon this subject was somewhat meagre, and so it was. That is, however, either the fault or the misfortune of the plaintiff. If there was in existence any further evidence in addition to that adduced which might have tended to show that the plaintiff’s occupation was such as to place his loss of income in the category of personal earnings, it was in the plaintiff’s possession and he should have produced it. If there was no such additional evidence he must abide by the usual and necessary inference .that a contractor, engaged in the business of constructing buildings, in which he buys material, employs labor, oversees the work, and looks for his returns to the difference between what he gets and what he expends in performing his contracts, is not one who depends upon his personal earnings but upon the profits of his business. In either event the defendants are entitled to a new trial.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
Cullen, Cli. J., G-ray, Edward T. Bartlett, Willard Bartlett, Hiscock and Chase, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.