
    The Industrial & General Trust, Limited, Plaintiff, v. J. Kennedy Tod and James G. Leiper, Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    March, 1905.)
    Trial — Struck jury — When motion granted.
    Where through departure from the terms of an agreement under which plaintiff, a holder of railroad bonds, had deposited its bonds with defendants, the members of a committee engaged in an endeavor to reorganize the railroad property upon which said bonds were a charge, they have incurred a liability to plaintiff the measure of which depends upon a jury’s estimate of the actual value of the railroad as a going concern and of the proper inference as to the proportionate amount which would make plaintiff’s loss good, the jury’s equipment of intelligence and of practical business experience should be of the best and, in the interests of substantial justice, a motion for a struck jury will be granted.
    
      Motion for trial before a special jury.
    Stephen H. Olin (Austen G. Fox, of counsel), for defendants.
    Samuel Untermver, for plaintitff.
   Bischoff, J.

In my opinion the questions to be determined upon the trial of this action are of a character sufficiently intricate to call for the granting of this motion for trial before a special jury. Laws of 1901, chap. 602, § 5. Whether the application be made under this statute or under section 1063 of the Code of Civil Procedure the “ importance or intricacy ” of the case may be asserted as ground for the exercise of the court’s discretion, and assuming, as the plaintiff contends, that the amount involved (over $600,000) does not make the case one of “ importance,” because affecting no matter of public concern, “ intricacy ” is none the less present, and, as I think, to an extraordinary degree. The action is for damages for breach of contract, the controversy having arisen between a bondholder and-the members of a committee engaged in an endeavor to reorganize the railroad property upon which the bonds were a charge. Through their departure from the terms of the agreement under which the plaintiff deposited its bonds, for the purposes of the reorganization, the defendants have incurred a liability the measure of which depends upon the jury’s estimate of the actual value of this railroad as a going railroad, 119 miles long, with land, depots, rolling stock, wharves and appurtenances, * * * and it was for the jury to estimate the value of the bonded property according to their sound judgment and draw the proper inference as to the proportionate amount that the plaintiff should recover in order to make good the loss' it had sustained.” Industrial & Gen. Trust v. Tod, ,180 N. Y. 215. If the finding of damage is to be based upon inference rather than surmise and conjecture, the jury’s equipment of intelligence and of practical business experience should be of the best which any established method of selection may secure in the interests of substantial justice. Indeed, to grasp the facts and make a fairly intelligent estimate of the values involved each juror should have much of the capacity for financial analysis which a successful reorganizer of railroad properties may he deemed to possess, and, without prolonging the discussion, it is obvious that the extraordinary, rather than the ordinary, procedure available for the choice of a jury will tend to provide the more adequate equipment of tlie tribunal of fact.

Motion granted, with costs.  