
    William Csatlos, an Infant, by John Csatlos, his Guardian ad Litem, Appellant, v. Metropolitan Street Railway Company, Respondent.
    ■ Case on appeal —right of a respondent to have a qualification of a/n objection inserted,, as it occurred, after the ruling and exception.
    
    The official stenographer’s original notes of the testimony taken at a trial showed that, after the plaintiff’s counsel had made an objection and the court had sustained the objection and allowed the defendant an exception, the.plaintiff qualified his objection. There was no dispute as to the time when the qualification of the objection was made.
    
      Held, that as the qualification might have a material bearing on the question whether the ruling constituted reversible error, the plaintiff was entitled to have the qualification inserted, in a case on appeal served by the defendant, after the ruling and exception, and that it was improper for the trial judge on his own motion to strike out the qualification altogether.
    Appeal by the plaintiff, William Osatlos, an infant, by John Csatlos, his guardian ad litem, from an order of the-Supreme Court, made at the New York Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 7th day of June, 1901, denying his motion for a resettlement of the case on appeal.
    
      Wm. II. Leonard Edwards, for the appellant.
    
      John T. Little, for the respondent.
   Laughlin, J.:

Plaintiff has recovered a verdict for $10,000 damages sustained through the negligence of the defendant in the operation of a street car. Upon the trial the driver of the car was called as a witness for the plaintiff. On cross-examination the witness, after testifying that he had made a statement concerning' the accident which the bookkeeper of defendant wrote dowm but which the witness did not sign, was shown a statement which he admitted had been subscribed by him in the presence of one Stansbury who presented the statement to him at the company’s office. The statement purported to have been subscribed and sworn .to before Stansbury as a commissioner of deeds. The witness was then asked, “ And what did he (meaning Stansbury) say to you before you signed ,it ? ” The question was objected to by plaintiff’s counsel “ as calling for incompetent evidence.” The objection was sustained and defendant duly excepted. Plaintiff’s counsel thereupon said, “If the evidence is offered to show that he (meaning Stansbury) swore him, I consent to the question, but not to any general conversation.”

The official stenographer’s original notes and his transcript therefrom show that,' the qualification of the objection of plaintiff's counsel to this question was made after the ruling of the court and after defendant had taken an exception. There is no dispute that plaintiff’s counsel modified his objection to the question as herein stated and that such modification was not tiiade until after the ruling and exception on the original unqualified objection to the evidence as incompetent.

In defendant’s proposed case and exceptions the ruling of the court and defendant’s exception were inserted after both the objection to the question and the qualification or modification of such objection. Plaintiff, by an appropriate amendment to the proposed case, Sought to have the qualification or modification of the objection inserted after the ruling and exception in accordance with the fact as to the time it was made. The trial judge, instead of allowing this amendment, on his own motion struck out altogether the said statement of plaintiff’s counsel made after the ruling and exception. Plaintiff thereupon moved for a resettlement of the case in accordance with his proposed amendment. The motion was denied and plaintiff appealed.

The cross-examination of the witness printed in the récord before us indicated that he testified that the car brake was out of repair, and that its defective condition had been reported to the company prior to the accident. It is manifest, therefore, that it is important to the plaintiff to have the records show that he withdrew his objection to the question to the extent of allowing it to be shown that the witness was duly sworn. - The record should show the various steps and proceedings in their order upon the trial, and plaintiff was, therefore, also entitled to have the statement inserted at its proper place in accordance with his proposed amendment. (Cooley v. Trustees N. Y. & Brooklyn Bridge, 36 App. Div. 520.) The Code now expressly provides that such, an order is appealable. . (Code Civ. Proc. § 1347, as amd. by Laws of 1895, chap. 946.) The statement excluded may have a material bearing on the question as to whether the ruling and exception, with reference to which it was made, constitute reversible error, and there being no dispute about the facts, and nothing in the order to show that the recollection of the trial judge in any manner differs from the official stenographer’s record, the motion for a resettlement should have been granted. (Zimmer v. Metropolitan Street R. Co., 28 App. Div. 504; Gleason v. Smith, 34 Hun, 547; New York Rubber Company v. Rothery, 112 N. Y. 592; S. C., 119 id. 633.)

The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion to resettle the case in accordance with plaintiff’s twenty-eighth proposed amendment granted, without costs.

Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, without costs.  