37 Barb. 270 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1862
By the Court,
On the trial before the justice, this question was put to the witness : “ How much less buckwheat was there, than there would have been if the same had been properly threshed ?” The witness had already stated that there was 126 bushels after it was threshed, and that he had examined the straw ; that he thought it was not threshed clean; that there was a good deal of buckwheat left in it; th&t some of it looked as though it had not been threshed at all, and that some of it was threshed clean. He had also stated that he had owned a farm and had been a farmer, but was then a merchant. The question was objected to upon two grounds: 1. That it calls for the opinion of the witness. 2. That it does not appear that the witness is competent to give an opinion. The objection was sustained by the justice, and the evidence excluded, but upon which, ground does not appear. The county court sustained the
In order to examine the question presented, intelligently, it is necessary, in the first place, to see what was the issue between the parties, to which the evidence proposed was addressed, and what it was that .the plaintiff was seeking to establish, by the answer to the question propounded.
The issue-on this branch of the case was, whether the defendant, who was a tenant of the plaintiff, in securing and threshing the crops, had performed the labor in such a negligent, unskillful and unworkmanlike manner that such crops, or a considerable portion thereof, had been thereby lost to the plaintiff. The precise object of the inquiry was to ascertain how much, or what proportion, of the grain was left upon the straw after the threshing; and the first question presented is, whether the opinions of witnesses, properly qualified to speak upon the subject, are competent evidence to aid in establishing such a fact.
The standard works upon the law of evidence do not furnish us any light upon this question, and the reported cases do not seem to have established apy clear and well defined rule upon the subject of the admissibility of evidence resting in the judgment or opinion of an informed and competent witness, in matters of common experience and observation, having little, if any, relation to questions of science and skilled experts. Indeed the cases appear to have created confusion and uncertainty, instead of establishing order and certainty, uponthis subject. I shall cite only a few of them. (DeWitt v. Barly and Schoonmaker, 17 N. Y. Rep. 340. S. C., 5 Seld. 371. Clark v. Baird, Id. 183. Morehouse v. Mathews, 2 Comst. 514. People v. Eastwood, 14 N. Y. Rep. 562. Rock, and Syr. R. R. Co. v. Budlong, 6 How. Pr. R. 467. S. C., 10 id. 289. Cook v. Brockway, 21 Barb. 331. Nellis v. McCarn, 35 id. 115.) The books are full of cases upon this subject; but enough have been cited to show that the rule is not yet fixed upon any well defined principle: In
A brief reference to a very few of the most common cases
It is quite obvious that the decision in Nellis v. McCarn, and that in Cook v. Brockway, cannot both stand as law, as they are directly opposed to each other, in principle. In each case the action was to recover for the loss or destruction of property, and in one, the opinion of the witness making the examination, as to the quantity lost, or destroyed, was allowed, and in the other held inadmissible. Suppose in Cook v. Brockway the action had been in the nature, of trover, for the conversion of the chaff after the threshing and cleaning, or for the conversion of the wheat and chaff together, after the threshing and before cleaning, when no measurement had been, or could well have been, made. Is it possible in such a case, that a witness who had made a proper examination, and was competent to form an intelligent judgment, would not be allowed to give such judgment or opinion as to the quantity of wheat converted ? I think not. And yet
In this case, it cannot be pretended that the witness was not qualified, by experience and examination, to form a reasonably correct judgment. I am clearly of the opinion, therefore, that the answer to the question was improperly excluded.
The plaintiff should also have been allowed to prove the conversion of his hay and corn by the defendant, and the receipt of the money therefor. The objection was that no such cause of action was stated. in the complaint; and upon this objection the evidence was excluded. The complaint contained a count for indebtedness from .the defendant to the plaintiff, for hay, corn and other property sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant at his request. Also on account of money had and received by the defendant to the plaintiff’s use. The plaintiff offered to prove the tortious taking, and the sale of the property, and the receipt of the money, and to waive the tort, and go for the money had and received, or for the value of the hay and the corn, as for goods sold and delivered. Whether the owner, whose property has been tortiously taken, can waive the tort, and bring his action as for property sold and delivered, while the wrongdoer still keeps the property in his possession, the cases do not agree. But they all agree that if the wrongdoer sell the property, and receive the money therefor, an action lies at the suit of the owner, for money had and received, and that such an action is a waiver of the tort. (Putnam v. Wise, 1 Hill, 234, 240, note a. Schroeppel v. Corning, 2 Seld. 112. Roth v. Palmer, 27 Barb. 652.) In such an action it was never necessary to state in the complaint how, or under what circumstances, the money came to the defendant’s hands. That is mere matter of evidence. The receipt of the money to the plaintiff’s use is the fact which constitutes the cause
The objection to the question whether the witness held the grain as his own, or as a pledge, was properly overruled. Whether he held it under one claim or the other, was a fact which he might testify to directly.
I think the objection to the question as to how much corn there would have been if it had been well taken care of, was properly sustained. The question related to the want of care in the cultivation of the crop. The answer could have been, at best, but mere speculation. If the witness had expressed his opinion on the subject, it would have been a speculative opinion merely, based upon no knowledge whatever, of any existing fact. Here speculative opinions are not competent evidence, unless indeed in the case of experts. In respect to unprofessional persons, opinions, to be competent evidence, must be such as to constitute, in some degree, knowledge of existing facts.
The judgment of the county court and that of the justice must be reversed.
Johnson, Welles and J. C. Smith, Justices.]