57 N.Y.S. 716 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This judgment cannot be sustained. It is impossible to read the record without seeing that the verdict was obtained by suppression of fact and false swearing. The plaintiff was the only witness who testified with regard to the actual occurrence which resulted in the accident. He was entirely uncorroborated upon the salient question of the defendant’s alleged negligence. As to the damages, he was contradicted even by his own witnesses. His testimony throughout was calculated to mislead the jury. It was presented with specious artifice, which was evidently the result of careful preparation. The plain intention from the time of the accident down to the trial was to suppress all information upon the subject,, and thus to deprive the defendant of an opportunity for inquiry. At the foundation of this purpose lay the plaintiff’s false oath with regard to the number of the car from which he claims to have fallen. The accident is said to have occurred on the 16th day of April, 1895. It was, according to the plaintiff’s story, a north-bound cable car. He says he was a passenger on such a car, and that at his request it was stopped on Third avenue, near the corner of Sixteenth street; that while he was then attempting to alight the car was suddenly started, and he was thrown down, and dragged half a block. The-defendant heard nothing of such an occurrence, and knew nothing of the plaintiff’s claim, until this action was brought against it some-weeks later. The most diligent inquiry thereafter failed to identify the occurrence, or to give the defendant the slightest clue thereto. Thereupon the defendant demanded a bill of particulars, and quite naturally asked, among other things, for the number of the car. Upon the answer to this demand depended the defendant’s hope of getting at the truth of the case. Failing in that respect, it would,, in the nature of things, be remitted to a general inquiry throughout its entire system. The plaintiff’s sworn answer to this vital demand was “that the number of the car on which plaintiff was a passenger-as alleged in the complaint is not known to plaintiff.” This statement was absolutely false. Upon the trial the plaintiff was forced to admit that at the time of the accident a man named Zooner picked him up, and gave him á card upon which the number of the car was written. “He gave it to me on a card,” the plaintiff testified. “His-name was on that card, and the number of the car which I was hurt on was on that card. * * * I had it in my pocket when I went to see my lawyer. * * * I know the number of the car was on the card what I gave to Mr. O’Connor,”—the latter being his attorney.It is not entirely clear whether the plaintiff gave O’Connor the card before or after the latter prepared the bill of-particulars. If it was before, then the attorney must have been particeps criminis. But, whether before or after, the plaintiff thus fraudulently suppressed a vital fact, and was guilty of false swearing to effect that suppression. We may add that there was not a word of explanation on this-
■ There is no question here of the weight of evidence as between witnesses on the respective sides. The defendant was cheated out of the possibility of calling eyewitnesses to the occurrence. It furnished such testimony as the circumstances permitted. “A witness,” as was said by Bapallo, J., in Elwood v. Telegraph Co., 45 N. Y. 554, “may be contradicted by circumstances as well as by statements of others ■contrary to his own.” We have here an uncorroborated plaintiff, who is contradicted by himself and by others on the most vital points of the case, and who has been most thoroughly and completely impeached. It would be a grave reproach to the administration of justice if a verdict founded solely upon such testimony should be permitted to stand. There is no rule which requires such a result. It is true that the jury are the sole judges of the credibility of witnesses. It is apparent, however, that the jury here misapprehended the scope .and effect of the facts and circumstances which the record discloses. Then, too, there is a qualification to the conclusiveness of a jury’s •decision, even upon a question of credibility. Its verdict upon that head may savor of prejudice or bias quite as much as its verdict upon the weight of conflicting evidence. Upon either head an appellate court should act with extreme caution in disturbing their findings. But it should not shrink from its plain duty in a proper case, and ■especially when, upon all the facts and circumstances, justice demands the exercise of its well-defined power. The rule is a reasonable one that when the verdict cannot be sustained by any impartial or intelligent consideration of the evidence it . should be set aside. The cases are numerous where verdicts founded upon the uncorroborated, contradictory, and improbable testimony of a single witness have been set aside. We have the converse in Sheridan v. Mayor, etc., 8 Hun, 424, where it was held that the uncontradicted evidence of an interested party is not necessarily conclusive upon the court or jury. In Boyd v. Colt, 20 How. Prac. 384, where it appeared that the plaintiff wrote a letter before the commencement of the action flatly contradicting his testimony upon the trial, the court said that “the jury were bound to disregard his oath.” The same doctrine was maintained in Hutting v. Railway Co. (Sup.) 16 N. Y. Supp. 673, and in Becker v. Railway Co., 87 Hun, 317, 34 N. Y. Supp. 1134. In the former case the plaintiff’s evidence was found by the appellate court to be “so contradictory and unsatisfactory that a verdict based upon it •should not be permitted to stand.” In the latter case the headnote reads (and it is a correct summary) that: “The testimony of a party ¡to an action, upon which the judgment rendered therein in her favor was largely based, is insufScient to sustain the judgment if it is rendered unreliable by her incorrect testimony in one instance and her failure to remember certain facts and circumstances, as likely to be In her memory as those facts upon which the case depended, and in
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, and' anew trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. All; concur.