Court Opinion

ID: 6135410
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 21:39:57.874537+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:29.135436
License: Public Domain

Bosworth, J.
It is not alleged that the persons serving as-jurors, were not in fact competent jurors, nor is any objection to them suggested, except that they were not of the number who had been selected by the commissioner of jurors to do jury duty. No objection was made to the regularity of the sheriff’s proceedings in summoning the jury, or to the qualification or fitness of either of the jurors, on executing the writ. There is no provision in chapter 495 of the laws of 1847 (734) requiring the sheriff of the city and county of New York, on executing writs of inquiry, to summon only such persons as the-commissioner of jurors may have selected to serve. Nor does that act provide that the commissioner of jurors, or any other-officer, on the requisition of the sheriff or otherwise, may designate the persons whom the sheriff may summon as jurors in such cases. I think there is nothing in the objection first-taken, as it is presented on this motion.
The jury were to assess the damages which the plaintiff had sustained by reason of the facts mentioned in the complaint as constituting the cause of action. It was proper to read the-complaint in order that they might know what those facts-were. By failing to answer the complaint, the material allegations contained in it, were for the purposes of the action admitted to be true. {Code, § 165). The objection taken was, that it should not be read as evidence at all. This objection-is not tenable. If the objection had been taken that it could not be read as evidence of the amount of damages the plaintiff' was entitled to recover, and the right to read it for that purpose had been insisted on, and it had been allowed to be read expressly for that purpose, a different question would be presented. The objection alleged to have been taken was too-broad to enable the court to say that the decision was erroneous.
Neither can the court say that the damages were excessive* Testimony to that point was given on both sides. What that-*375testimony was, is not disclosed by the affidavits. The court therefore cannot see that the damages are excessive. The complaint claimed damages to the amount of $1,000, and the jury assessed them at $450. This motion is addressed to the equitable consideration of the court. The evidence on which the jury acted not being before the court, it is unable to say that any injustice has resulted to the defendant from the proceedings.
The motion is therefore denied.