98 N.Y.S. 1031 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
The plaintiff’s case depends almost entirely upon the credit which he is given as a witness, and it is evident that his evidence is not always reliable. It is improbable tl^at the foreman told him there was no -nut for this bolt, for the evidence shows that nuts to lit this bolt, a kind in common use, were in great quantities in different places around the factory to the knowledge of the employees. The witness Tower swore that he had worked in the factory for two or three weeks prior to the accident, and that there was no knifegrinder there. The evidence is very conclusive that Tower did not begin work in the factory until March first, the accident occurring March third. The evidence is clear that the bolt upon the guard was properly secured by a nut, and that a knifegrinder was employed in the factory all the time. It is very clear that the knives were in proper condition, and that the machine was not defective in that respect. It is unnecessary to go through the evidence of the various witnesses. The plaintiff is contradicted upon every substantial point of his case,by many disinterested witnesses and by circumstances which seem to be significant. The evidence of many witnesses tends to show that the plaintiff persisted in wearing a glove upon his hand while operating the machine, against the caution of his superiors and his coemployees, he being told that it was liable to cause his fingers to be caught in the machine, and the .glove was found upon the machine, with the back of the hand torn off, immediately after the accident. -Plaintiff seeks to explain this by Tower swearing that the day before the accident the plaintiff requested him to cut off the fingers on the palm side of the glove,
The respondent’s counsel calls attention to the fact that this question was taken verbatim from Grant v. National Railway Spring Co. (100 App. Div. 234), and assumes that it is justified by that decision. There, when such a question was asked, the trial court discharged the jury, imposed the costs of the term upon the plaintiff, and, upon appeal, the order was reversed, the court saying it could not inquire into the motive of counsel, and the asking of such a question did not warrant the order. Here the plaintff has obtained a verdict in a case where the evidence was decidedly against him, and it is probable that some extraneous matter entered into the consideration of the jury, and it seems that the question and the ruling might well have prejudiced the jury, and it is more natural to explain the verdict in that way than in any other suggested. Evezy suitor is entitled to a fair and impartial trial, and to have the verdict of the jury rest upon the law and the facts of the case entirely unprejudiced by outside considerations. A defendant corporation on trial in a negligence case has enough to meet the case upon the merits, and ought not to be required to meet suggestions which are thrown out, the only effect of which are to prejudice the juzy or to get into their minds something which ought not to be in the case. And when counsel ask such questions, overreaching the limit, with a hope to-gain a benefit from them, it is but fair that he should take the risk, and in a close case the court may properly consider that such suggestion had the very effect which counsel intended it should have. It is unnecessary to decide that the asking of such a question is a legal error which calls for the reversal of a judgment, but it should be understood that such questions are dangerous, and when asked without good reason may be very unpi-ofitable to the party who asks them. While in this case it is clear that the verdict is
The verdict is against the evidence, and is not fairly sustained by it, and the order should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to .the'&ppellant to abide the. event. | It is, therefore, unnecessary to consider several rulings in the case which' otherwise might require serious consideration.
Chester, J., concurred; Smith and'CooHRANE, JJ., concurred iii result; Parker, P. J., not voting.
Order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant tó abide event.