The plaintiffs alleged and attempted to prove a cause of action founded upon an account stated. The court sustained objections to nearly all the questions propounded by'the plaintiffs’ attorney. Counsel could not prove his whole case in a single question, and he should have been given a fair opportunity to present his evidence. The record does not disclose fully what occurred in the court •below, because the justice directed the stenographer not to place the colloquy which took place upon the record. The court directed the counsel for the plaintiffs to proceed with his case. Defendants’ counsel then moved to dismiss the cause", on the ground that the plaintiffs’ counsel would not proceed. The court granted this motion, and the plaintiffs excepted. Defendants’ counsel then moved to dismiss, “on the ground that the plaintiffs have not proven facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” This motion was also granted, and the plaintiffs excepted.
The plaintiffs seem to have been prevented from presenting their proof, and to have had their complaint dismissed because of an alleged failure of proof. The motion to dismiss was made before the plaintiffs had rested their case. How long a time intervened between the direction of the court to the plaintiffs’ counsel and the motion to dismiss upon the ground that the plaintiffs would not proceed does not áppear from the record. The respondents in their brief, in attempting to justify the action taken, assert that the plaintiffs’ counsel “remained silent for a perceptible period of time.” Even a lawyer may do this without having his case dismissed on this account. The plaintiffs were entitled to present all of their evidence before the court ruled on its sufficiency. This case seems to exemplify the truth of the aphorism . of Fuller that “he that proceeds on half evidence will not do quarter, justice.”
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant'to abide the event. All concur.