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Snelling v. Yetter No. 1

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Feb 1, 1898
25 App. Div. 590 (N.Y. App. Div. 1898)

Opinion

February Term, 1898.

R.L. Redfield, for the appellant.

John Ewen, for the respondent.


Before considering this appeal upon its merits we should notice a technical objection thereto which is suggested, though not distinctly made, in the respondent's brief.

The suggestion is, that the plaintiff made her motion for a new trial upon the trial justice's minutes, without taking an exception to the dismissal of the complaint. The only provision of the Code of Civil Procedure authorizing the trial justice, where he dismisses the complaint upon a trial by jury, to entertain a motion for a new trial upon his minutes, is in section 999, and that provision limits the exercise of the power to a case where the motion is so made upon exceptions.

What actually transpired upon the trial was this: The defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon several grounds, one of which was that the evidence failed to show that the defendant was engaged in the business of a common carrier as well as that of a warehouseman. Thereupon the plaintiff's counsel asked the court to permit him to show this fact more distinctly than he had done. The court granted the request, and accordingly one of the defendant's employees was called as a witness. The witness clearly proved that the defendant was a common carrier as well as a warehouseman. What followed we quote from the record: "Mr. Redfield: If it is necessary, I respectfully renew my motion that this case be submitted to the jury on the question of whether or not a contract of carriage was not entered into on the occasion spoken of. The Court: I think the motion must be granted. The complaint is dismissed; but on the motion for a new trial I will hear Mr. Redfield on Saturday, or take whatever papers he desires, to give him the benefit of any question there may be. Do you make a motion for a new trial, Mr. Redfield? Mr. Redfield: Yes, sir."

It thus appears that the learned trial justice was of the opinion that the defendant could not, upon the facts adduced, be charged as a common carrier. Apparently, however, he was not, at the moment, entirely clear upon the point, and he, therefore, suggested the making of a motion for a new trial in order to give the plaintiff the benefit of further consideration. It is clear that his ruling was based merely upon present impression and was meant to be tentative, and an exception thereto was necessarily implied from what then took place. It will be observed that, in one breath, he in substance said to the plaintiff's counsel: "I think the complaint should be dismissed, but I will hear you later upon a motion for a new trial; and then I will give you the benefit of any question there may be as to the correctness of my present impression." A fair paraphrase of the counsel's response is this: "Very well, I will make the motion you suggest, and when it is argued I will endeavor to show you that the complaint should not be dismissed." There was here no passive assent or submission to a tentative, much less to a final ruling. On the contrary, the counsel dissented therefrom and expressed his purpose to question and review the ruling and to secure its reconsideration and reversal. He seems to have done everything that was possible under the circumstances, in the way of excepting, save to use the formal expression, "I except."

We think what the plaintiff's counsel thus said and did were sufficient to authorize the hearing and decision of the motion below. An exception is but the formula of dissent from a ruling, expressed with sufficient clearness and definiteness to raise some concrete point upon appeal. This dissent and the intention to question the ruling thereafter is usually expressed by the phrase, "I except." The right of review, however, is not lost, merely because this technical phrase does not happen to be employed. Any other clear expression will suffice, provided such expression be adequate to convey the idea which underlies all exceptions. That idea is non-assent and non-submission to the ruling. If that is not clearly expressed, assent or at least submission is undoubtedly implied. Here, however, as we have seen, the plaintiff did not passively submit to the ruling. He actively dissented therefrom and expressed his purpose to question and review it. His attitude throughout "indicated exception," which is Webster's definition of "exceptant." The learned trial justice thoroughly understood this, and even inspired the particular procedure, which was to give the plaintiff's dissent and purpose their appropriate effect. An exception was the legal prerequisite to that procedure. We must assume that all parties knew this, the defendant's counsel as well as the learned trial justice. Thus, the plaintiff, according to the general understanding, was, in legal intendment, "excepting" to the ruling which he was led to review. This is emphasized by what followed.

The motion for a new trial was subsequently heard and fully considered upon the merits in a carefully written opinion. There was not then the slightest suggestion on the defendant's part that the court lacked the power to hear and determine the motion upon the merits, nor that it was not made upon exceptions as required by the section in question. Had the defendant then made any such suggestion, the learned trial justice could, and undoubtedly would, at once have permitted the formal phrase "I except" to be placed upon the record nunc pro tunc. Having stood by and argued the motion upon what was understood to be an exception, it is too late now for the defendant to make the suggestion which we find in his brief. We think, therefore, that the present appeal should be heard upon its merits.

The facts are in a narrow compass. The plaintiff's goods were in the defendant's warehouse under a storage contract from July 24 to September 24, 1895. Upon the latter day the plaintiff terminated the storage agreement, paid all the defendant's charges and surrendered the contract. She thereupon directed the defendant to deliver the goods to her at her house in Sixty-fourth street in this city, and she paid the charges of transportation. The defendant accepted this order and entered it upon his books. This was between twelve M. and one P.M. At the same time the plaintiff told one of the defendant's employees that she wished the goods delivered that afternoon. This employee testified that she specified four o'clock as the hour when they were to be so delivered. It appears that the goods were destroyed in the defendant's warehouse that very afternoon shortly before four o'clock. The defendant says that the fire occurred about fifteen minutes after three P.M.

We think the question thus presented was settled favorably to the plaintiff's contention by the case of Wade v. Wheeler (3 Lans. 201; affd., 47 N.Y. 658). As in that case, the defendant here assumed the relation of carrier from the time of his acceptance of the plaintiff's order for transportation. It follows that at the time of the fire he had the goods in his possession as a carrier and not as a warehouseman. During the brief period which intervened between the direction to deliver and the time when the delivery was to be made, the goods were in the defendant's hands as accessory to such delivery. They were not then in his hands for the plaintiff's convenience, subject to her further instructions. When she left the defendant's warehouse that day, there was nothing further to be said by either party upon the subject of delivery. The plaintiff was to give no further instructions as to the carriage. Her directions were final. She had closed the storage contract, and the defendant had thereupon accepted the carriage contract. Whatever time was necessary to get the goods together that particular afternoon, or to have them in proper condition for handling upon the defendant's carts, was incidental to the new arrangement. The brief period required for preparation did not even temporarily restore the warehousing relation. The status during the preparatory period was the same as though the goods had been primarily delivered to the defendant for carriage at the time when he accepted the plaintiff's order on that head.

We think, therefore, that the complaint should not have been dismissed, and that the motion for a new trial upon the judge's minutes should have been granted. The judgment appealed from should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

RUMSEY, O'BRIEN and PATTERSON, JJ., concurred; VAN BRUNT, P.J., dissented.


Upon an examination of the record in this case there does not appear to be any question presented to this court for review. No exceptions were taken during the course of the trial by the appellant. It is true that the appellant asked to go to the jury, but no exception whatever was taken to the refusal of the court to permit him so to do. Neither was any exception taken by him to the action of the court in dismissing the complaint.

It is true that a motion for a new trial was formally made, which was subsequently argued upon the grounds then stated, none of which referred to any exception as taken, or assumed that any had been taken, and which was denied. As a motion for a new trial, in a case where a direction has been given dismissing the complaint, can only be founded upon exceptions (Code Civ. Proc. § 999), no question whatever was presented to the court by such motion.

By the prevailing opinion an exception has been imported into the case which nowhere appears upon the record. The question to the plaintiff's counsel: "Do you make a motion for a new trial?" "Yes," in no way indicated, upon the part of the court, that an exception had been taken by the counsel to the ruling which had been made, and upon which only the motion for a new trial could be founded. As has been stated, when the counsel came to make his motion for a new trial he nowhere founded it upon any exception which, he claimed, had been taken to the rulings of the court. The order entered upon the motion for a new trial was silent as to its having been made upon exceptions, and the court refused to resettle that order because, evidently, the order truly expressed in that regard what had taken place before the court.

I think it is too late, after a case has been presented to the Appellate Division, for this court to amend the record by inserting exceptions which it does not appear were ever taken or thought of upon the trial.

Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.


Summaries of

Snelling v. Yetter No. 1

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
Feb 1, 1898
25 App. Div. 590 (N.Y. App. Div. 1898)
Case details for

Snelling v. Yetter No. 1

Case Details

Full title:ABBIE E. SNELLING, Appellant, v . ANDREW B. YETTER, Respondent. (No. 1.)

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department

Date published: Feb 1, 1898

Citations

25 App. Div. 590 (N.Y. App. Div. 1898)
49 N.Y.S. 917

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