Plaintiff sued for the value of a case of coats delivered to defendant and alleged to have been lost through the criminal complicity" of defendant’s driver with certain other persons. Plaintiff has recovered the full amount of his claim, namely, the value of the shipment, $726.50, together with interest and costs.
It is unfortunate that after a prolonged trial this judgment must be reversed for material error in respect of proof of the value of the goods. When plaintiff’s shipping clerk showed his inability to 'state the amount or character of the goods included in the shipment, there was introduced in evidence a paper alleged to be a copy made by the bookkeeper of an entry in the books which was alleged to have been made in turn from a shipping slip made out by the witness. It needs no citation of authority'to demonstrate that no proper foundation, even under the most liberal construction, was laid for the introduction into evidence of this paper. See City of New York v. Second Ave. Co, 102 N. Y. 572.
Respondent claims that the error was not material, or at all events that appellant’s.counsel laid no stress on it, "citing a remark made by appellant’s counsel within a minute or so after the examination brought out this paper. Appellant’s counsel said: “ Well, I don’t want to take up a lot of time over an immaterial issue.” It is not clear to what counsel referred, but
It follows, therefore, that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide the event.
Guy and Cohalah, J J., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide event.