178 A.D. 682 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
The general principle that protected such institutions as the defendant from actions for negligence, as declared in Corbett v. St. Vincent’s Industrial School (177 N. Y. 16) and Ackley v. Board of Education (174 App. Div. 44), does not
The plaintiff pleaded, inter alia, that the defendant, in disregard of its duties, negligently, carelessly and recklessly hired and furnished to the plaintiff incompetent, unskillful and careless superintendents, agents, teachers, guides and employees, and inter alia that plaintiff’s injuries were sustained by reason of such negligence, recklessness and wrongful conduct of the defendant. The counsel for the plaintiff, in opening his case, did not mention this feature of the complaint, and, when he closed, the defendant moved to dismiss the plaintiff on the opening. The court thereupon dismissed the plaintiff, and a judgment was entered in that the court “ upon the pleadings and upon the opening statement of plaintiff’s counsel to the jury, and upon motion of defendant’s counsel,” had ordered dismissal. But the opening of counsel was not the plaintiff’s pleading. The plaintiff should not have been dismissed unless the counsel “ in his opening address, by some admission or statement of facts, so completely ruined his case that the court was justified in granting a nonsuit.” (Hoffman House v. Foote, 172 N. Y. 350. See, too, Montgomery v. Boyd, 78 App. Div. 64; Eckes v. Stetler, 98 id. 76.) All that counsel did that can be charged up against the plaintiff was to omit mention of that feature of his complaint that I have hitherto described. If counsel had stated that he had abandoned that charge, or had admitted that he could not establish it, or if such change of attitude had been elicited by inquiry of the court or of his opponent or in consequence of the affirmative assumption of the latter, then nonsuit might properly have followed. But I think that such was not the situation when the counsel closed his address and when the court took up the motion for dismissal. (Baylies Tr. Pr. [2d ed.] 247; Wilson v. Press Publishing Co., 14 Misc. Rep. 514.) In Brashear v. Rabenstein (71 Kans. 455) the court well say: “ The pleadings, and not the statements, make the issues, and no matter how deficient a statement may be from an artistic standpoint, or what its shortcomings may be in the estimation of the critical attorney on the other .side, the court is not authorized to end the case because of
It follows that, despite the omission of counsel in his opening, the plaintiff should not have been dismissed but he should have been afforded opportunity to establish, if possible, the negligence of the defendant in the selection of servants to whose culpability the casualty could be attributed.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial is granted, costs to abide the event.
Thomas, Stapleton, Mills' and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.