The action before the justice was brought by the plaintiff, as assignee of one Harlow Williams, to recover pay for boating a load of wheat for the defendants from Oswego to Port Byron. The boating of the *50wheat was done by Williams and one Davie. Davie assigned his interest in the claim by parol to Williams, who assigned it to the plaintiff. The summons before the justice was returnable on the 7th of April, 1857. On that day the parties appeared and joined issue. The trial was adjourned to the 17th day of April, at which time the parties again appeared before the justice, when a witness was examined by consent, and the cause further adjourned without objection to the 26th day of May. On the last mentioned day the parties appeared, and the plaintiff, by his attorney, moved for an attachment against one Campbell. This motion was founded on an affidavit sworn to by the said Williams, showing that Campbell was a material witness, and that without his testimony the plaintiff could not safely proceed to trial; that the witness was not in attendance in obedience to a subpoena duly served on him, and that he was going east and was expected back in the course of ten days. The justice thereupon granted an attachment for the defaulting witness, returnable on the 13th day of June following. The return then states as follows: “ June 13th, parties appeared; defendants’ counsel moved that suit be discontinued, on the ground that the suit was improperly held open for return of attachment; overruled.” The trial then proceeded upon the merits, witnesses were called on both sides and examined and cross-examined by the parties respectively, and on the 17th day of June the justice rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, for $69.21 damages and $4.41 costs.
Whatever error there might have been in the last adjournment or holding open of the cause, whichever it may be called, was cured by the appearance of the defendants and going to trial upon the merits, on the 13th of June. (Dunham v. Heyden, 7 John. 381. Willoughby v. Carleton, 9 id. 136.)
On the trial, Williams, the assignor of the demand in action, was called by the plaintiff and examined as a witness upon the merits. No previous notice that he would be examined as such witness had been given to the defendants, *51and his competency was, on that ground, objected to in due time. This objection was not tenable; no notice in such case was necessary. (Code, § 399. Vassear v. Livingston, 3 Kern. 248, per Denio, J. Bidwell v. The Astor Mutual Ins. Co., 16 N. Y. Rep. 263.)
There were, in the course of the trial, several objections to questions put to witnesses, on the ground that they were leading, which objections were overruled. Some of these questions may have been strictly leading in form, but it was a matter of discretion with the justice whether to sustain these or not. This has often been held in respect to objections to questions to witnesses on that ground; and the court upon review never reverses a judgment on that ground, unless it is plain that the court has abused its discretion. We do not perceive any reason to suspect any such abuse in this case. Upon the merits, there is no error, that we are at liberty to notice. The only objection that can be made to the judgment, on the merits, is that the wheat, for carrying which the action was brought, was not all delivered to the defendants by Williams. The shipping bill stated the quantity at 2700 bushels, and the defendants contend that only 2664, which would be 36 bushels less than what the shipping bill admits, was delivered. The evidence does not show that any part of the wheat received by Williams and Davie was abstracted in any way. I think it makes out a fair case, showing that he delivered all that he received, although it is possible that some of it might have been stolen or embezzled. Assuming that the justice found that he had delivered to the defendants all that he received from the consignor, which the evidence would well warrant, then the question would be at which end of the route the mistake in the quantity was made. On that question it seems to me that the defendant Roberts, who was a witness, and who testified he weighed the wheat at Port Byron on its arrival there, was as likely to make a mistake as any one else, when the return shows he testified that *52he made it 2664 bushels, and that there was 44 bushels less than 2700. These were all questions of fact, which have been decided by the proper forum, and we think rightly.
[Monroe General Term, March 5, 1860.The judgment of the county court should therefore be affirmed.
Welles, Smith and Johnson, Justices.]