Snell v. Snell

By the Court, W. F. Allen, J.

The motion in arrest of judgment, if such motion is known to the present system of practice, is not before us, as there is no appeal from the order denying the motion, and the record proper makes no mention of it, or of the decision of the court thereon. The statement in the case in regard to it is out of place, as the case properly only relates to the proceedings upon the trial, and not to proceedings in the action before or after the trial. If the defendant had intended to appeal from the order, or to review it under section 329 of the Code, upon the appeal from the judgment, the order should have been certified and returned upon the appeal, and made a part of this record, That some of the counts are defective is beyond dispute within well settled rules of pleading, which have not been disturbed by the Code.

*429The case making a part of the record, and upon which the defendant seeks to reverse the judgment, shows that all the evidence given was properly, although not exclusively applicable to the good counts. The proper disposition of the motion in arrest therefore, if such motion was proper, would have been to amend the record, by applying the verdict, general in its terms, to the good counts, upon payment of the costs of the motion. (Postley v. Mott, 3 Den., 353; Sayre v. Jewett, 12 Wend. R., 135; Norris v. Durham, 9 Cow., 151; Highland Turnpike Company v. McKean, 11 Johns. B., 98). The amendment in such cases is allowed, because the defect does not affect the substantial right of the parties, and the court can see that the defendant has not been prejudiced. Section 116 of the Code requires the court in every stage of an action to disregard any error or defect in the pleadings or proceedings, which shall not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party; and declares that no judgment shall be reversed or affected by reason of such error or defect. The record, shows that the evidence applied as well to the good as to the bad counts, and that the jury did not therefore assess damages against the defendant for any cause of action defectively stated in the complaint. If the order denying the motion in arrest was properly before us upon this appeal, the only order we could grant would be to arrest the judgment, unless the plaintiff should amend the verdict and pay the costs of the motion ; but the Code, in terms, prohibits the reversal of the judgment for any technical defect which may properly be thus amended. If the entire complaint was defective in substance, the objection might well be taken upon an appeal from the judgment; so if the evidence given only applied to the bad counts, or some of the evidence upon which the jury may have rendered their verdict, applied exclusively to the bad counts, it might be cause for the reversal of the judgment.

But when there are good and bad counts, and the case shows that all the evidence was admissible under the good counts, although a part may have also been applicable to the bad, the judgment cannot be reversed. It is sustained by the good counts, and by the evidence, and verdict applicable to them.

It is also objected that the plaintiff should have been non-*430suited on the trial, because he did not prove the paper in question (the paper with the stealing of which the plaintiff was charged) to be the will of Jacob P. Snell. There are several answers to this objection.

1. The point was not made upon the trial, and as it might have been obviated if it had been made, it was waived and cannot now be urged.

2. The paper was spoken of by the defendant as, and called by him, the will of Jacob P. Snell. He charged the plaintiff with stealing the will of Jacob P. Snell from the surrogate’s office. This obviated other or any proof that the paper referred to was in part the will of Snell. (Case v. Buckley, 15 Wend., 327).

3. It was proved by one of the subscribing witnesses to have been the will of Jacob P. Snell referred to in the complaint and in the conversation of the defendant.

Another point is made upon the charge of the Judge. I do not perceive that any error was committed in the charge. If the judge was not sufficiently specific in regard to the words spoken in German and in English, and in calling the attention of the jury to the fact, that the words proved to have been spoken in either language must be referred to the proper counts, the defendant should have called the attention of the judge to the omission, and. asked a more specific direction. But the exception is general to the whole charge, and almost the whole, if not the entire charge is clearly right, and the defendant cannot, under this general exception, single out any part of the charge as erroneous. A part of the charge being correct, the exception must be overruled. (Ives v. Osgood, 2 Seld., 233 ; Hunt v. Maylon, 3 lb., 266).

The judgment must be affirmed.