38 N.Y.S. 350 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
This action was brought to recover the value of two horses, one .T cart, one buggy and one set. of double harness, alleged to have been converted by the defendant.
The plaintiff’s proof tended to establish that the property had been in use at a livery stable at Lawrence Beach Hotel on Long Island in- the summer of 1892, and. was sent from there by the plaintiff to the stable of James Wood at Garden City, and that, while in Wood’s stable, was levied upon by the defendant under an execution issued upon a judgment rendered against one Rufus W. Leavitt, and that subsequent to the levy the property was taken away from Wood’s stable and sold. ■
It was the claim of the defendant, that, after the levy had been made, the property was taken from his possession by John J. Walsh, .who had been duly appointed the receiver of said Leavitt hy an order of the court which antedated the execution, and had been sold by said receiver. The deputy sheriff who made the levy testified that he did not remove the property from Wood’s possession, but that after he was notified of the receiver’s appointment, and demand was made for the property, he relinquished the levy. The defendant offered in evidence a copy of the order appointing the receiver, which was excluded, and the court also excluded all evidence as to the receivership and limited the proof to the . question of Leavitt’s ownership of the property levied upon, to which rulings the defendant excepted.
The plaintiff’s testimony also was that one of his. horses sent to Wood’s stable was a sorrel and one a bay, while the testimony on the part of the defendant was that both horses levied upon were bays and that the T cart was not found at Wood’s,- but at a sale stable a mile from Wood’s stable. Upon the question of value, the plaintiff’s evidence was that the property was worth $600, while the evidence on the part of the defendant was that its value was much 'less.
We are of the opinion that the judgment must be reversed. It is not the rule that a trial court is authorized to withdraw a case from the jury and direct a verdict in cases where both parties aslc for a direction in their favor. Parties may consent that the court shall pass on all questions both of law and fact; and if they do they will be bound by their election; and when both parties ask a direction and neither requests to go to the jury, it will be presumed that such consent was given. Such was the case of Adams v. Rosooe Lumber Company (2 App. Div. 47), recently decided by this court. But every party is entitled to present to the court for its decision such legal questions as he thinks arise upon the testimony, without being subjected to the penalty of losing his right to have the case submitted to the jury. And it is only when no request is made to go to the jury that he ivill be held to have waived that right. If the rule were otherwise, it would never be safe to ask for a direction of a verdict. By so moving a party might lose his right to have the case submitted to the jury; aud by failing to so move he would be held to have waived the point on appeal. We are aware that there are cases which apparently hold that where both parties move for a verdict the court may draw the necessary inferences of fact from the testimony, and decide the whole case. But the Court of Appeals has settled the rule as we have stated it. (Shultes v. Sickles, 147 N. Y. 704.)
In this case the .defendant requested a direction in his favor on the sole ground that he had relinquished the levy. That motion was properly denied because, assuming that fact to be true, a trespass was proven and the defendant was liable at least for nominal damages. But, assuming that the levy had not been relinquished, there were other important questions of fact to be determined
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event. •
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new. trial granted, costs to abide event.