
    David B. Dunham, Appellant, v. Edward M. Harlam, Respondent.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    January, 1898.)
    1. ¡Practice — Effect of failing to move to dismiss the complaint at the end of the whole case,
    Where no motion is made to dismiss the complaint in an action at the close of the whole case, the defendant admits that there is a ques-' tion for the jury, and also waives the objections which he made upon' his motion to dismiss the complaint.
    
      2. Services — Estimate.of cost — How it may be sent.
    Where the owner of a brougham has authorized a livery-stable keeper to have it repaired, the contractor may properly address and send an estimate of the cost- of the repairs to the owner' at the livery stable instead óf at his private residence; or such an estimate may be sent directly to the livery-stable keeper as being the agent of the owner.
    Appeal by defendant from an affirmance by the General Term of the Oity Court, of a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury ■ in favor of plaintiff for $203, besides costs.
    Delos McCurdy and McCurdy & Yard, for appellant.
    David M. Neuberger, for respondent.
   Daly, P. J.

The defendant had been sued for repairs made upon

his brougham by plaintiff, which repairs were ordered by one Gammon, . proprietor of the livery stable where the defendant kept his brougham, and the defense was that the defendant. had not authorized Gammon to order the repairs. Gammon, however, testified that the defendant told him to get the brougham repaired, and, so, an issue of fact was presented which required the submission of the case to a jury upon that point.

The jury gave a verdict to the plaintiff for the full amount claimed by him. But it might be urged, upon' the plaintiff’s own evidence, that he was not entitled to so much; for his witness, Gammon, 'gave testimony which undoubtedly qualified his statement as to the defendant’s direction to have the brougham repaired. Gammon testified that the brougham was injured while in his stable, by accident, and that he'was to pay out of his own pocket for the repairs necessitated thereby, while the other repairs the defendant was'to pay him for. By the accident in question, one of the wings of the carriage was pulled off, and a deep indentation was made in the back by a shaft falling down behind it. The repairs required thereby were the ones to be paid for by Gammon. Other work was done upon the brougham, including a set of rubber fires, of the value of $85, and inside as well as outside renovation, and it must be assumed that the defendant’s direction to Gammon to have repairs made referred only to those improvements and renovations, since Gammon was to make the others himself; and so the defendant, at most, would be liable for the repairs he ordered and not for those that Gammon was to pay for.

This point, however, was not made upon the trial, and the case was submitted to the jury without objection by defendant. We are unable to afford him relief upon any ground which is not presented by appropriate exception. Geitelsohn v. Citizens’ Savings Bank, 20 Misc. Rep. 84. There was no motion to dismiss the complaint at the close of the whole case, and this was a concession that there was sufficient evidence to submit to the jury as to defendant’s liability for value of all the repairs; and it was a waiver of the objections made upon the motion to dismiss at the close of the plaintiff’s case. Scott v. Yeandle, 20 Misc. Rep. 89. There was no exception to the charge of the judge, which submitted the whole case to the jury. There remain to be considered, therefore, only the exceptions to the rulings upon evidence.

The plaintiff, in advance of doing the work, sent an estimate ” to defendant by mail, which it was claimed he kept without objection. This paper was addressed to him at 162 West One Hundred and Thirty-second street, which the witness testified was Gammon’s stable. The objection was placed on the ground that there was no evidence that the defendant ever deceived it. It subsequently transpired that Gammon’s stable was on the opposite side of the street, at No. 163 West One Hundred and Thirty-second street, but this was not the ground of objection to the letter when it was offered, or. subsequently, when the location of Gammon’s stable was proved. The chief -ground of objection seems to be that the letter, although addressed to the defendant, was.not sent to his house or place of business, but to Gammon’s stable. As defendant had authorized the stable-keeper to have the repairs made, the estimate might properly be sent to the latter, and would have been admissible if addressed to him instead of the defendant, he being the defendant’s agent in the matter. None of the other exceptions to the rulings upon the evidence require notice. Ho error is pointed out by appellant’s brief, and none is apparent upon the record. ' ■ ■ i

Upon the merits of the case, it would seem that defendant was unquestionably liable to plaintiff for the greater part of the work done upon his brougham, and that he could have confined the recovery in the case to the particular sum for which he was liable, if he had' called the- attention of the court to this point upon the trial. For the reasons already pointed out, he has no remedy upon appeal to this court, as we can only correct errors 'of law presented ■ by appropriate exceptions.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.

McAdam and Bischoee, JJ., concur.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.  