6 Barb. 419 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1849
This court can review this case only on questions of law; and we therefore necessarily lay out of view many of the considerations suggested in the arguments of the counsel, because they involve mere questions of fact. The first objection is of this character. It does not appear that the referees ruled that the approval of Shipman was conclusive as.
The second objection may involve both questions of law and fact: of law so far as it relates to the construction of the contract, and of fact so far as the question is raised whether the stoppage of payments by the Westchester subscribers was not caused by the railroad company. It is difficult to ascertain, from the case, on which of these grounds the referees found for the plaintiffs below. They may have found for the defendants below on the question of law and have concluded that the failure of the Westchester subscribers to pay their several amounts gave the railroad company a right to stop the work; yet as a matter of fact they may have found that such failure was caused by the railroad company itself, and that therefore it was not competent for the company to set up such failure as a defense to the claim in this suit. It would not therefore be proper for this court to entertain this objection, as they might be dealing in matters of fact, which, on this hearing, are not within their province.
The third objection is also of the character of those which we cannot, as a court of errors, review. It is that damages were allowed by the referees without having evidence of the nature and amount of those damages. They had evidence before them, on that subject, and whether they gave to that evidence its proper weight,- or arrived at a just conclusion upon it, are questions of fact not properly before us.
The fourth objection, however, may involve a question of law, in this, that it may raise the inquiry whether the difference between the price which the contractors were to receive from the railroad company and the price which, they were to pay their sub-contractors was the true measure of damages. It is evident that that was the rule which the referees adopted; but it is not
In this there was error, (Masterton v. Brooklyn, 7 Hill, 61;) and for this simple reason, that the market price or fair value
The fifth objection relates to the allowance of interest, and is founded on the allegations that it was not demanded on the trial, and that it is not warranted in law. The first of these allegations is for the court below alone, and the latter is the only one we can consider. The referees have doubtless allowed interest on the ground that the evidence warranted them in finding that as to the sum on which they allowed interest, there was a stated account and a balance struck. If the evidence warranted this finding, they were right in allowing interest; and whether it did warrant such finding is a question which it is not in our province to consider. We cannot therefore say there was error in this.
For the error then of the referees in the rule of damages which they adopted, and in receiving the testimony which they admitted on that point, their report ought to have been set aside. The judgment of the superior court must be reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.