Court Opinion

ID: 5188428
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 15:32:17.712992+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:49.827184
License: Public Domain

Woodward, J. (dissenting):
This is an action for negligence resulting in injuries to the person and property of the,plaintiff. On appeal it is conceded that the evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant was sufficient to take the case to the jury, and there seems to be no reason to question the propriety of submitting to the jury the question of the lack of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, a condition of facts appearing from the evidence which would, justify a finding that the plaintiff had established his freedom from contributory negligence.
The complaint, aside from the formal averments, alleges that “heretofore and on the 30th day of June, 1899, while the plaintiff was lawfully driving upon Quincy street and crossing Franklin avenue in said Borough of Brooklyn, one of the cars of the defendant running at an unlawful ,:rate of speed unlawfully and wrongfully and negligently ran into plaintiff with such force and violence that his horse was killed, his wagon demolished and that he was violently thrown from said wagon to the street and dragged for a considerable distance, whereby he was cut, bruised, wounded and injured about the head, body and limbs, his right knee was injured, he sustained a serious injury to his head, his back was badly wrenched, and he sustained a severe nervous shock to his whole system,” and “ that by reason of the aforesaid, plaintiff has been and will be compelled to suffer great pain, and has been and will be compelled to spend money for medicine and medical attendance, and has been and will be prevented from attending to his usual vocation, and has been as he verily believes permanently injured and that he will never fully recover from the effects of the same, in all to his damage in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars.” It is doubtful, except for the subsequent act of the plaintiff in bringing a separate action for damages for the loss of the horse and wagon, if any one would have questioned the sufficiency of ‘this complaint as a demand for all of the damages growing out of the one wrongful act of the defendant. It states concisely the elements of the plaintiff’s damages, and fixes a sum which covers alloLhis damages. The trial court was not in error in refusing the motion to amend the complaint, and in holding that the .pleadings were broad enough to admit of evidence of the value of tile horse and wagon destroyed.
The point urged by the appellant’s counsel, however, seemed to *96be that he was surprised at the demand of the plaintiff for that portion of the damages growing out of the killing of the horse and the demolishing of the wagon. The defendant insists that it is entitled to some kind of relief. When the plaintiff brought a subsequent action for the damages to his property, the defendant in answering, alleged the pendency of the action now under consideration as a bar to the second action, and it is conceded that under the rule in Reilly v. Sicilian Asphalt Paving Co. (31 App. Div. 302) a recovery in the present action would be a bar to a recovery in the second action; that there is, in fact, but one cause of action.' Recognizing this fact, counsel for the plaintiff moved at the opening of the trial to amend the complaint by inserting the words at a proper point, “ And that the horse which plaintiff drove and which was killed .by the negligence of the defendant, was worth the sum of $1,750, and that .the carriage which was demolished by reason of the premises was worth the sum of $400.” This motion was opposed by the defendant, counsel urging that he was taken by surprise at being called upon to defend for the value of a horse alleged to be worth $1,750. Yet it was stated in the argument that after bringing the present action “ an action was brought, suing us for $2,150 for the loss of this man’s horse and wagon.” To this latter action an answer was interposed, in which the pendency of' the present action was set up as a bar. The learned trial court denied the motion to amend, but stated : “ 1 am going to allow them to recover the value of the horse and the wagon if they prove it under the pleadings as it stands.” Counsel for the defendant then gave notice that he should move to withdraw a juror, on the ground of surprise. Counsel for plaintiff offered to stipulate that if the defendant would withdraw the answer in the second action, serving a new answer in which the pendency of the present action should not be set up in bar,' he would refrain from introducing evidence as to the value of the horse and wagon. “ If -there is any surprise here,” said-the plaintiff’s counsel, “ he can withdraw his,, answer and serve me with a simple denial of the negligence. If you do that I will not put in any evidence here on the value of the horse, and this jury need assess no damages on that subject.” The court then suggested : And the damages for those two items shall, be assessed iii the other action if the negligence is established in this.” To this plaintiff’s counsel assented,- and the court *97suggested that it “ is a perfectly fair offer.” Defendant’s counsel then urged that if the plaintiff was to be permitted to prove the value of the horse and wagon, the defendant be permitted to amend its answer and allege that there is a separate action to recover the damages which they seek in this action. To this the court replied : “ I am not going to allow them to' amend. I am only going to try the case on the pleadings as made. Your adversary has made you an. offer which I consider absolutely fair to you, that you shall stipulate in the other action that the issue of negligence shall abide the event of this. So that, if you get a verdict here you have a verdict there, and if there is a recovery here, that shall settle your liability in the other case for tlxe horse and wagon, and it shall be a mei-e assessment of daxxxages.” Defendant’s couxxsel declined the proposition, and the- case went to trial upon the pleadings as they were, the defendant objecting to the intx’oduction of evidence as to the value of the horse and wagon. These objections were ovexTuled, the couiff and counsel rediscussing the propositions stated above, and then defendant’s counsel moved to withdraw a juror on the ground of surprise, which motion was also denied and an exception taken. "While it-is a well-established rule of law that a single cause of action cannot be severed or divided in oi'der that separate actions may be brought to recover damages for the various parts of what really constitutes one démand (Reilly v. Sicilian Asphalt Paving Co, supra), we see no reason why the plaintiff should be denied a right to recover in the present action because his attorney made a mistake in his practice, and brought, two actions instead of one. If the pi’esent action coixld be pleaded as a bar to the subsequent action (and there is no doubt of this), and the defendant was awai’e of the claim of the plaintiff in inspect to tlxe value of tlxe horse and wagon, it is hardly in a position to urge such a surprise upon the occasion of this trial as to justify the trial court in permitting the withdrawal of a jurox\ The defendant had had its attention called to the loss of the horse and wagon in this accident, not alone by the allegations of the complaint-in this action, but by the complaint in a subsequent action, in which the amount of the damages for the hoi’se and wagon were stated. It had already pleaded ixx answer to the last action that another suit for the same cause of *98action was pending, and by this pleading it said to the plaintiff that' all of the damages growing out. of the one cause of action must be determined in a single trial; and yet when the plaintiff, sought to amend his complaint so as to place the question unmistakably before the court, it interposed objections and urged that it had been surprised— that it was not prepared to litigate the question of all the - damages growing out of the accident.
A motion to withdraw a juror is addressed to the discretion of the court (2 Rumsey Pr. 288, and authorities there cited), and the circumstances of this case do not warrant the conclusion that the court erred in the use of its discretionary powers in denying the motion, nor has the defendant any reason to complain of the remarks of the court called out in the course of a discussion of defendant’s objections to the amendment of the complaint. If the plaintiff had a cause of action against the defendant, he had a right to all of the damages sustained in the accident complained of. The effort of the defendant to make use of the present action as a bar to a subsequent suit, and then to prevent the plaintiff recovering in the case at bar through ■ technical object tions to the complaint, or on the pretext of surprise, is contrary to the spirit of the' jurisprudence of- this State. Section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure not only gives the court power to amend the complaint, but where “ the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense ” it • may conform the pleading or other proceeding to the facts proved, and “ in every stage of the action, the court must disregard an error or defect, in the pleadings, or other proceedings, which does not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party.” . It was necessary either that the defendant .waive the bar to the subsequent action, or that the plaintiff be allowed to submit the whole controversy to the jury, and we conclude that the trial court did not err in the course pursued upon the trial in denying defendant’s motion to withdraw a juror. The plaintiff’s complaint stated a cause of action in which all of the elements of damage were noted, and demanded judgment for all of such damages in the sum of $25,000, and proof of those damages • was properly admitted.
The plaintiff is a draftsman, as he testified, and we see no objection to the introduction of drawings of his own as evidence of his skill, where it was shown that he was rendered incapable of doing this *99character of work by reason of the injuries received through the negligence of the defendant. The recovery sought was for the injuries sustained, and it was proper to show that he was a man capable of making artistic drawings and that he had been deprived , of that faculty by reason of his physical injuries.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.