Citation Numbers: 117 N.Y.S. 161
Filed Date: 5/27/1909
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The action was for conversion of a two-horse truck, claimed to have been hired February 1, 1908, by plaintiff to one Frank, and sold in the latter part of the same month under a chattel mortgage given by the said Frank to defendant, which mortgage included the said truck among a number of articles. The evidence as to ownership is somewhat conflicting; it being claimed by the defendant that plaintiff sold the truck to Frank.
Without passing on that question, we think, however, that the evidence as to value at the time of the sale was not sufficiently conclusive to j'ustify the j'udgment of the learned trial court. The plaintiff’s son testified that the truck, when new, two years before the time of the sale, had cost $375, and that j'ust prior to the hiring (February, 1908) it had been entirely renovated at a cost of $100, so that it was as good as new. George also testified the truck was in good condition, but gave no other evidence of value. This was substantially the plaintiff’s case on that head. As against this the defendant swore that the truck, when new, was not worth more than $175; and both he, the marshal, and the auctioneer (the latter two being-disinterested witnesses) testi
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.