131 N.Y.S. 496 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
This is an action by a passenger' on one of defendant’s trains to recover for the loss of $1,180 in money and a gold watch of the value of $50 lost or destroyed in a railroad accident near Pawling. The law of this case was settled so far as the Trial Term and this court are concerned upon the former appeal (109 App. Div. 709).
Upon the former trial the complaint had been dismissed before the taking of any evidence. We said: “The dismissal of the complaint was error. The evidence should have been taken, and the questions thereon arising would have been the negligence of the defendant, the freedom from contributory negligence of the plaintiff, ■ and whether or no the watch was a ‘ necessary, convenient and ornamental, reasonable, personal chattel,’ and. whether the money or any.-part thereof came within the definition of a reasonable and suitable amount for the journey contemplated.”
' One-of the objections raised in the dissenting opinion, that there was no allegation in the complaint that the money lost was being carried to defray the expenses of the journey of the plaintiff or his wife, or that it was necessary for that purpose, has been met’ by an amendment of the complaint allowed by the Special Term upon proper terms.
The trial court tried the case according to the rules laid down by our opinion. The .main part of the appellant’s brief, is confessedly a reargument of the case as formerly presented. The sole question to be now considered is the claim that “the verdict should be reversed on the ground of the inherent improbabilities of the plaintiff’s story.” •
■ The defendant’s negligence and its. responsibility for the accident are not questioned and could not be. The road was washed out, the rails spread, the cars were derailed and overturned and, defendant made no attempt to prove due care on its part, indeed, it appeared in the evidence that defendant
I think there was a pure question of fact for the jury. Plaintiff testified that he- had been a saloonkeeper in Jersey City; that he had sold out; that he wqs worth $8,000; that he had sent his furniture over to his mother’s; that he had packed two trunks and left them with a friend to be called for; that his wife was visiting her aunt at Amenia, N. Y.; that, intending to start on a four months’ pleasure trip, he drew $1,180 out of the bank and went to Amenia to get his wife. He produced his bank book and attempted to show that fact by it. His counsel asked:What bank did you draw this $1,180 from?” The question was objected to and sustained. Afterwards plaintiff testified: “I have got the pass book of the bank showing that I drew out this money before I went to Amenia. Q. I ask you if this is the pass book (Exhibiting) ? Defendant’s counsel: Objected to as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial.. The Court: I do not see why that is competent or why it is necessary for you to show where you got the money. No question but what he had it,”
The wife testified that her husband brought the money up and gave it to her and. she counted it and put it in her bag and she saw it there the next morning when they started on the train. It seems to me the defendant is estopped by its own conduct from questioning the fact that the plaintiff did have in his possession at that time the amount which he claims. Appellant claimed upon the argument that all of its train employees went around getting names of people who were injured and had lost property and that this plaintiff’s name and that of his wife did not appear. Examination of the evidence shows that none of the employees were in a position to know who were injured or what was lost —
That, it will be noted, was not a demand upon the company but was a notice that the property had been lost and if found should be returned. It was made promptly after the event, the amount is peculiar and coupled with the offer of proof of the bank book, which the defendant kept out, conclusively, established, so far as this case is concerned, it seems to me, that plaintiff did have the money. At least the defendant is fairly
He did not, as matter of fact, take this trip because the money was lost and because his wife was badly injured, but he did not go into business or do anything for a year after. If, as matter of fact, he was entering upon a trip of four months,the jury were entitled to say that for two people traveling and living in hotels for that space of time the amount of money provided was reasonable. He was not limited to the fare necessary to get him from Amenia to New York. A continuing journey was' contemplated at that time. Nor was he required to provide himself with a letter of credit, to open bank accounts in the various cities or do any of the other things to secure the necessary funds suggested by the learned counsel for the appellant. He was entitled to do as he pleased and to take such sums as were reasonable for his sojoumings, for his expenses, his fares, possible sickness, pleasure and entertainment. The reasonableness of the sum was a question of fact and not of law. .
The case was properly submitted to the jury; they saw and heard the witnesses, who were, submitted to a grueling cross-examination, and as trial by jury of questions of fact continues to be the law of this State, I find no justification for disturbing this verdict. This court settled the law of the case and the jury have now passed upon the facts.
In Hasbrouck v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (202 N. Y. 363) the Court of Appeals reasserted the doctrine of the cases cited in our former opinion and allowed a recovery to the amount of $1,500, the value of rings taken from a grip, Vann, J., saying: The jewelry was adapted to her tastes, habits and standing, as the court found upon sufficient evidence, and the amount of money was no greater than- was found to be reasonable and prudent. * * ' * The contract to transport the plaintiff carried with it the duty of transporting a. reasonable amount of
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs and disbursements to the respondent.
Laughlin and Miller, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., dissented..
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) :
I do not concur in the affirmance'of this judgment as I think the verdict of the jury that this sum of money was taken by the plaintiff with reference to the immediate or the ultimate purposes of the journey of the plaintiff and his wife at the time of the accident is not sustained by the evidence. The plaintiff’s wife had been spending several days at Amenia visiting a relative. Plaintiff started- from New York upon one of the defendant’s trains on a Friday, purchasing a ticket to Amenia and return, and on the following Monday morning he and his wife returned to New York on the train which met
I, therefore, dissent.
McLaughlin, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.