26 N.Y.S. 595 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
We think all the questions raised on this appeal were correctly disposed of by this court on a former argument, as reported in 21 N. Y. Supp. 234, unless this court erred in sustaining the decision of the trial judge, wherein he allowed evidence of the value of the standing fruit trees destroyed by the fire, instead of the difference in value of the land on which they stood, by reason of their destruction. In deciding this case on the former argument, this court followed the decision in Whitbeck v. Bailroad Co., 36 Barb. 644. That was an action for damages for the destruction of plaintiff’s fruit trees by fire caused by the negliligence of the defendant; and the witness was permitted, in answer to questions put by the plaintiff’s counsel, under defendant’s objection, to state the value of the trees destroyed, and this court, on appeal, held the evidence competent. That decision was referred to in Argotsinger v. Vines, 82 N. Y. 314, and was tacitly approved by the court, although a different rule of damages was adopted in that case; and the court, without sustaining the rule then laid down, affirmed the judgment, on the ground that the difference, if any, in the damages in that case, was too small to justify a reversal, and therefore applied the maxim, “De minimus non curat lex.” But it is now claimed that the law was definitely settled in Dwight v. Railroad Co., 132 N. Y. 199, 30 N. E. 398, where it was held that the following question was erroneously put and answered under the defendant’s objection. “Q. What were these twenty-one trees worth at the time they were killed?” The attention of this court was not called to that decision at the time of the former hearing of this appeal, if, indeed, it had been promulgated at that time. Assuming, however, as we must, that this decision, which is directly in point, is the law of this state, the evidence offered and received in this case was erroneous; and, as the same related to an important question in the case, the judgment must, for that reason, be reversed, unless we can see that the other rule of damages also adopted by the plaintiff in his proof cured the error, and that no damage resulted to the defendant from the •receipt of the evidence erroneously received. It is quite apparent