Upon the trial of this action the court was requested by the attorney for the defendant to charge a certain proposition as one of law. Without expressly refusing, it did not so charge, but submitted the proposition to the jury as a question of fact for them to pass upon, and then laid down a rule of law adapted to the conclusion that they should reach upon the question so submitted to them. The defendant's attorney excepted generally, without specifying whether the exception was intended to apply to the failure to charge as requested, to the submission of the question to the jury as one of fact, or to the rule of law laid down to guide them as they found the one way or the other. There was a verdict for the plaintiff and the defendant now insists that the court erred in *Page 65 not charging as requested and in submitting the question to the jury as one of fact, but does not challenge the proposition of law actually charged.
We think that the appellant raised no question by his exception, because it was impossible for the trial court to tell what it was aimed at. When a request is refused, either expressly or impliedly, and a modified or independent proposition is charged instead, correct practice requires the party who considers himself aggrieved to except to the refusal to charge as requested, and, by an independent exception, to the charge as made. In this way only can he protect himself against the entire action of the court upon the request presented. A general exception gives no adequate warning to the court, so that it can reconsider its action, or to the opposing counsel, so that he can request a reversal of the ruling. (Sterrett v. Third NationalBank, 122 N.Y. 659, 662.) An exception should point clearly to a single ruling or proposition of law. As was said by this court inMcGinley v. U.S. Life Ins. Co. (77 N.Y. 495, 497), "the counsel making the exception should put his finger on the proposition clearly and distinctly, beyond any question, and employ language entirely plain, so that there can be no doubt as to the real character of the exception, or as to what was actually intended."
A single and general exception taken to several dissimilar rulings is not specific enough to answer the purpose, because it does not point out any particular error. (Smedis v. Brooklyn,etc., R.R. Co., 88 N.Y. 13, 23.)
Moreover, as in the case before us, where a part of what the court said upon a certain subject is correct and a part incorrect, a general exception to all that it said cannot be sustained. (Wells v. Higgins, 132 N.Y. 459, 464; Adams v.Irving National Bank, 116 N.Y. 606.)
We are unable to review the question that the defendant desires to have decided for the want of an adequate exception, and the judgment appealed from must, therefore, be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *Page 66