18 Johns. 141 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1820
delivered the opinion of the Court. The objection made at the trial, that the defendant was a feme covert, was totally unsupported by proof. The long and continued absence of Reuben Paddock, from the United States, without any account of him for twelve years, under the circumstances of this case, furnished an irresistible presumption, from analogy to the statute of bigamy, and the statute concerning leases determinable upon lives, that he ■^as dead. In the present case, the jury were authorised to presume his death in a much shorter period. The facts justified them in presuming Paddock’s death, by the foundering or wreck of the vessel in which be left Kem York. The presumption does not rest merely on the fact of his not being heard from, but from the vessel never being heard of, nor any part of the crew. The language of the judge could pot be too strong in regard to the fact of Paddock’s death, and there was nothing for the jury to deliberate on.
On the second ground, we are of opinion, (and in thia the judge who tried the cause concurs,) that the defence set up ought to have been gone into, with a view to the reduction of the amount claimed, and that the defendant was not driven to her cross action. We know of no case, in which there is an omission to return the article agreed to he sold, which precludes the defendant from contesting the
A new tría! must, therefore, be granted, with costs to abide the event of the suit.
New trial granted.