8 How. Pr. 377 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1852
The County Court has reviewed the evidence and assumed to correct the verdict ol the jury as to the amount. (The evidence will appear more fully hereafter.)' If the County Court can thus reform the verdict, upon the evidence in this case, it will be difficult to find a case in which he may not do so. The County Court is directed, upon appeal, to “ give judgment according to the justice of the case, without regard to technical errors and defects vrhich do not affect the merits. In giving judgment the court may affirm or reverse the judgment of the court below, in whole or in part, and as to any or all the parties, and for error of law or fact.” (Code, § 366.) Does this section authorize the County Court to review the evidence before the justice, and if, in the opinion of the court, the verdict is too large, to reduce it 2 Previous to the Code it was settled that a judgment for an entire thing could not be reversed in part •and affirmed in part; that if the judgment was for distinct things, for instance, for damages and for costs, it might be reversed for the one and affirmed for the other. See Sheldon agt. Quimbee, (5 Hill, 441, and cases cited.) Has the Code changed the law upon the point we are now considering 1 By the 2d Revised Statutes, section 181, the court was directed to give judgment in the cause as the right of the matter may appear, without regarding technical omissions, imperfections, or defects in the proceedings before the justice, which did not affect the merits, and may affirm or reverse the judgment in whole or in part. It was never claimed under this or previous similar provisions, that an entire judgment as for damages, could be reversed in part and affirmed in part. If there was no evidence to support the judgment it was reversed; if there was evidence upon both sides—a mere conflict of evidence, the judgment was affirmed. See Stryker agt. Bergen, (15 W.,
The Code, however, contains the additional words “ and for errors of law and fact.” And it has been supposed that this confei’s upon the County Court the authority to review all the evidence and to remodel the verdict in accordance with the -views of such court, and I suppose the County Court, in this case, proceeded upon this ground. This is an erroneous view of this provision of the Code. Errors of fact, as here used, have no reference to an erroneous finding of the court or jury upon the evidence, but it refers to those errors of fact not appearing from the record or evidence, such as the infancy, coverture, &c., of some of the parties, who have not properly appeared.
This clearly appears from the amendment of the section in 1851, by adding thereto the directions for determining the
The County Court erred in reversing the judgment in part and affirming it in part, as to the entire damages. What judgment ought this court to give! The appellate court may reverse, affirm, or modify the judgment appealed from. (§ 330.)
We must reverse the judgment of the County Court, and in case no errors were committed in the Justices’ Court, affirm the judgment of the justice. But suppose we find errors committed in the Justices’ Court, are we to reverse it upon this appeal! The defendant has not appealed, as he might, from the judgment of the County Court. He appears content with that, and pursues his appeal no further. It has been suggested that, as the defendant has not pursued his appeal to this court, we should not look for errors in the Justices’ Court, but should affirm the judgment; that if we reverse the judgment of the justice, upon this appeal of the plaintiff, it will present the anomaly of a plaintiff, causing by his appeal, a reversal of a judgment in his favor, with which he is entirely satisfied, and which he desires to sustain. .
Having come to the conclusion that there was no error in the justice’s judgment, it is not necessary to pursue these questions.
The plaintiff proved the delivery, on the 14th, 16th and 17th September, of oysters and fruit,, the charges on which amounted to $102,70—these charges were higher than railroad charges.
It was proved that Mills, a brother of the defendant, was his clerk, and that he was in the habit of calling at the plaintiff’s place of business, and enquiring if any goods—any oysters and fruit had been received, and that on such occasions he told the clerk of the plaintiff, as soon as they came, to'have them sent to the plaintiff’s store, and the witness states he always sent them. The evidence of the declarations of the clerk were objected to, and the objection was overruled.
It was also proved by a witness that he carted fruits and ovsters from Kasson’s to defendant’s store, that the clerk, Mills,
If the defendant had called personally at the depot, and had done and said what the clerk did and said, it would have been evidence tending to show a right, on the part of the plaintiff, to carry the goods from Albany to Buffalo, and so as to what occurred at the store, when goods were received as coming from the plaintiff. The same effect must be given to the acts and declarations of the clerk, provided he was acting at the time, as the agent of the defendant; and I think the evidence was such as to justify the jury in so finding. The clerk, Mills, was present in court, and was not called by the defendant as to his agency or authority.