18 Misc. 430 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1896
The appellant’s brief enters at some length into the questions of fact involved in this litigation, and counsel urges that the testimony given as the principal support of the plaintiff’s cause of action was successfully demonstrated to have been unworthy of belief and that, generally, the preponderance of proof was against the verdict rendered. This question, however, was solely within the province of the General Term below to determine, and our inquiry must be confined to questions of law presented by exceptions contained in the record, taking all controverted issues of fact to have been resolved favorably to the respondent by the verdict and, by the affirmance of the jury’s finding, this court is precluded from an- examination into the merits other than for the purpose of discovering whether there was an absence of any evidence in support of the recovery. Carney v. Rielly, 18 Misc. Rep. 11; Grier v. Hazard, 39 N. Y. St. Repr. 74.
From the appellant’s citation of authorities it appears that our jurisdiction over questions of fact arising upon the trial of causes in the District Courts has been confounded with our limited power of review in such cases' as the present, wherein we sit not as a tribunal of fact, but as the ultimate tribunal of law.
The action was brought to recover the agreed price of 10,000 cigars, under a verbal contract for their sale and delivery to the defendant by the plaintiffs upon the defendant’s refusal to accept and make payment for the goods, and it is claimed for the appellant that the trial justice erred in denying the motion for a dismissal of the complaint upon the grounds that the individual assuming to make this contract for the defendant had no authority so to do and that the transaction was void under the statute of
Exceptions were taken to the admission in evidence of letters written by Brintzinghoffer to the plaintiffs, relative to this transaction, at the time of making the contract, upon the ground that there was, at the time of the admission, no proof of authority to bind the defendant. We think that no error was committed in this regard; the matter had to do with the order of proof, which was within the discretion of the trial court, and, moreover, the question was one which did not depend upon original authority alone since, by ratification, these acts of the agent, within the course of the transaction, could have become binding upon the defendants, and proof in that regard was afterward forthcoming. The admission of the evidence, although unsupported by proof of authority at the time, was, therefore, not error such as could call for a reversal of the. judgment. Rogers v. Murray, 110 N. Y. 658; Smith v. Dodge, 19 N. Y. St. Repr. 292.
The court properly admitted in evidence the “ Oigar list,” or catalogue, issue by the defendant to the trade and mailed by Brintzinghoffer to the plaintiffs, containing a mention of this particular brand of cigars as being in stock and for sale at retail. This paper was fully identified by the witness as being the printed catalogue issued by the defendant and it was material in so far as it tended to show, the latter’s admission of the receipt and acceptance of the goods.
The other numerous exceptions' taken by the appellant to rulings upon evidence have been examined and are not found to call for individual discussion; in the majority* of cases they were taken to discretionary rulings' and in no casé is prejudicial error apparent-
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
Daly, P. J., and McAdam, J., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.