44 How. Pr. 69 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1872
—The defendants rest
The judge regarded the time when the despatch was received as material to the issue, and it certainly was, for there was conflict upon that point between the plaintiffs’ and defendants’ witnesses, and conflict, also, in respect to what subsequently occurred throughout the day. The letter of the plaintiffs, which the judge admitted, not only corroborated the statement of the witness King, as to the exact time, but also the testimony of both King and Waring the plaintiffs, in respect to other matters occurring during the _ day between them and the defendants’ employees, and also contained statements of facts, which neither of them had testified to. Now, being received as an admission on the part of the defendants, it is impossible to say what effect it may have had upon the jury. It was an action for negligence, and the judge left it to the jury to say whether the messages failed to reach their destination because of the misconduct and negligence of the defendants’ agents. If the facts were as set forth in the plaintiffs’ letters, it was a very plain case of negligence, and the jury, for all we know, may have treated what was stated in the letters as admitted by the defendants, because there was no denial of it on their part by letter. Some very material things bearing upon the question of negligence were stated in this letter, and were not verified by the plaintiffs’ witnesses, one of which will suffice. The letter states that when
The defendants’ operator testified that it was a cloudy, wet, and gloomy day. That the wires were in working order until half-past 11 o’clock, a. m., when the last message was sent by him, and were interrupted from that time until half-past three o’clock in the afternoon, when the next message was sent, and that they continued in order until nine o’clock in the evening. That when the interruption was temporary, it was customary to receive messages, but that when the derangement was serious, and likely to cause considerable delay, it was customary
Present, Daly, Ch. J., Larremore and J. 3?. Daly, JJ.