17 Barb. 489 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1854
The action was brought by the respondent against the appellant, to recover the sum of sixty-five dollars and sixty-three cents for work and labor, to wit: “ For sawing one hundred and thirty-four thousand feet of lumber, and for putting on slash boards on dam, cleaning water wheels and filing saws,” See. The defendant answered the complaint, and the plaintiff replied. The action was referred to three referees, who heard the same, and made a report that there was due from the defendant to the plaintiff the sum of seventy-two dollars and twenty-seven cents, for which the plaintiff entered judgment with costs. From that judgment the defendant appealed.
Upon the trial, before the referees, the plaintiff’s principal witness to prove his claim was his brother, John Smith. It appeared by his evidence that the plaintiff sawed for the defendant, in the saw-mill of the latter, 133,340 feet of lumber. That the witness worked with the plaintiff in sawing the lumber, at $18 per month, and that he had no interest in the sawing ; and that the sawing was worth fifty cents per thousand. Other evidence tended to show that the sawing was done under an agreement as to the price, at three shillings and six pence per thousand. One question, which appears to have been much litigated at the trial, was whether the sawing was done by the plaintiff and the witness John Smith jointly, for the defendant, with a view of
Welles, Johnson and Selden Justices.]
We can perceive nothing in the present case to bring it within the exception to the general rule. The witness has sustained but one relation to the party or to the cause, and that relation has at no time been changed.
If the foregoing view is correct, it is unnecessary to consider the other questions presented by the case, and which were discussed by the counsel upon the argument. For my own part, I am free to say that I have discovered no other ruling of the referees for which I should be willing to reverse the judgment But this, it seems to me, is insurmountable, and the judgment of the special term must therefore be reversed, and a new trial ordered before the same referees, with costs to abide the event.