14 N.Y.S. 891 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1891
The contention that the proof was insufficient to authorize a verdict for the plaintiff is clearly untenable, and upon an appeal from a judgment of affirmance by the general term we have no jurisdiction to review the weight of evidence. We are confined, therefore, to the consideration of errors in law apparent on the record. As intimated, the court rightly refused, to dismiss the complaint, either for intrinsic defect or insufficiency of proof. The complaint alleges property in the plaintiff, possession by the defendant asbailee, his refusal on demand to deliver the jewelry, and its value. Nothing more was requisite to a cause of action for conversion. And of these allegations something more at least than a scintilla of evidence was adduced. The-criticism of the appellant is that the jewelry owned and demanded by the plaintiff was not identified by proof as the jewelry in controversy; but, as.
The appellant further contends that his plea of the statute of limitations was made good by uncontroverted evidence. The proof is that in 1872 the defendant received the articles of jewelry on deposit for an indefinite period, and that in 1884 or 1885 the return of them was demanded by the plaintiff. The action was commenced in February, 1885. In the absence of evidence ■of any actual conversion the refusal to deliver on demand constituted the conversion, and indisputably the statute commenced to run at the time of that refusal. It was so at common law, and it is so by the express terms of the Code, which provides that “where there was a delivery of personal property, not to be returned at a fixed time or upon a fixed contingency, the time must be computed from the demand.” Section 410, subd. 2. “This section was a codification of the law as it existed at the time of its adoption, and created no new rule of law, ” (King v. Mackellar, 109 N. Y. 215, 224,16 N. E. Rep. 201,) and at common law the rule was elementary that “where a demand is necessary to perfect a right of action, the statute runs from the demand,” (13 Amer. & Eng. Enc. Law, 721; Payne v. Gardiner, 29 N. Y. 146; Smiley v. Fry, 100 N. Y. 262, 3 N. E. Rep. 186.) The authority relied upon by the appellant,—Ganley v. Bank, 98 N. Y. 487,-—instead of sustaining, quite clearly discredits, his contention. The distinction is between a deposit for a determinate and a deposit for an indeterminate period; and in the latter case the Bode, § 410, expressly provides that “the time must be computed from the demand. ” Here, the jewelry was not to be returned “at a fixed time or upon a fixed contingency,”—in other words, the deposit was for an indefinite time; and so the statute of limitations is no answer to the action. Fry v. Clow, 3 N. Y. Supp. 593.
So far as to allegations of error which we find to be untenable. We proceed to indicate others which we deem to be well supported, and of sufficient moment to require a reversal of the judgment. Although the action be against an executor, the plaintiff was not incompetent, under section 829 of the Code, to testify to the value of the jewelry. Burrows v. Butler, 38 Hun, 157. But, as a condition of the admissibility of her opinion, it was necessary to show that she was competent to form an opinion; in other words, that she was an expert on the value of jewelry. That a witness cannot testify as an expert unless he be an expert is elementary law and familiar practice.