Callanan v. Keeseville, Ausable Chasm & Lake Champlain Railroad

199 N.Y. 268
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 199 N.Y. 268 (Callanan v. Keeseville, Ausable Chasm & Lake Champlain Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callanan v. Keeseville, Ausable Chasm & Lake Champlain Railroad, 199 N.Y. 268 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The defendants ask us to settle the practice relating to the certification of appeals and to hold that when an application is made for leave to appeal and the Appellate Division certifies questions to be passed upon by the Court of. Appeals, it should certify such questions as will finally determine the litigation, no matter by whom they were suggested.

W e cannot control the right or form of certification, as the power to certify is conferred upon the Appellate Division by the Constitution, and it is the sole judge of the proper method of exercising that power, although we can decline to answer the questions certified under certain circumstances, as we frequently do. An appeal by permission is not a right but a privilege. If the questions certified are not satisfactory to the party who desires to appeal, he need not avail himself of the privilege extended, but in a case like this can wait until [282]*282final judgment is entered, and by his appeal from that judgment, with notice of an intention to review the interlocutory judgment, can bring up every question in the case. If the defendants were of the opinion that questions were not certified which they deemed essential, they should not have appealed as a matter of privilege, but should have waited until they could have appealed as matter of right. They had the option to appeal or not as they saw fit under the leave granted by the Appellate Division. By availing themselves of the option they waived, not temporarily but finally, the right to any review of the. interlocutory judgment, except such as can be had by virtue of the questions certified. That judgment cannot be reviewed in sections, some questions on appeal by permission and others on appeal as matter of right, when both appeals are brought by the same party. Such a course would lead to confusion and greatly increase the labor of review. The appeal from the final judgment, therefore, if one is taken, either with or without notice of an intention to review the interlocutory judgment, will bring up no question relating to the latter, but only such as may arise upon the accounting. These are our views upon the subject, and while the question may not be raised in due form, owing to the request of the defendants that we should settle the practice, we liave thought.best to express them at this time.

The first question certified in behalf of the defendants is as follows: “ Was the judgment authorised by the evidence and findings of the referee ? ”

The question is not whether the evidence supports the findings or the findings support the judgment, but whether the evidence and findings together support the judgment. "We cannot find facts, but where the evidence is undisputed we may presume that certain facts were found although not expressed. The rule is that when a fact is not expressly found and no request is made upon the subject, an appellate court will presume in support of the judgment but not to reverse it, that such fact was found provided it was conclusively proved and tends to support the express findings. Only to [283]*283this extent can findings be implied and, hence, we construe the first question as asking whether the judgment is authorized by the express findings and by those implied in support of the judgment according to the rule already stated. By reading the question with this meaning, and not otherwise, can we answer it effectively.

The findings prepared for the judgment roll are but few in number for so complicated an action, but after they were signed and filed, pursuant to an order of the Special Term inadvertently made but not appealed from, many proposed findings, consisting mainly of evidential facts passed upon by the referee, were added and these additional findings cover about one hundred pages of the appeal book. lie rendered judgment rescinding the contract on the theory that it had been continuously violated in all essential particulars by Powers and Mansfield and that they had repudiated from the outset a binding part thereof. He had power to decree rescission on either of these grounds without finding fraud. While the complaint alleged both fraud in making the contract and a continuous breach and repudiation thereof as the grounds upon which it should be rescinded, the referee rejected the allegations of fraud and proceeded to judgment upon the allegations of breach and repudiation. Eescission was the object of the action, and the plaintiff had the right to allege as many grounds for rescission as he saw fit. He could allege in the same complaint fraud in entering into the contract as one ground for rescission, the continuous and substantial breach of the contract as another ground, and the repudiation of a material stipulation as a third ground. In other words, he could allege as many grounds as he thought he could prove, and the defendants take nothing from the fact that he failed as to fraud when he succeeded upon the other grounds. It is not essential that the repudiation as to the extension of the road to Lake Placid should be a valid ground of rescission, as held below with the support of a strong argument by the presiding justice, provided the constant and substantial breaches in other respects were sufficient to authorize the judgment [284]*284rendered. The referee found, as separate and distinct grounds upon which rescission should be predicated, the failure ■ to transform the steam road into an electric road, to connect it with the dock on Lake Champlain - and to extend it to the upper bridge in Keeseville.

We think the facts found expressly, without aid from implication, support the judgment, and that the evidence supports the findings. There is no hard and fast rule on the subject of rescission, for the right usually depends on the circumstances of the particular case. It is permitted for failure of consideration, fraud in making the contract, for inability to perform it after it is made, for repudiation of the contract-or an essential part thereof and for such a breach as substantially defeats its purpose. It is not permitted for a slight, casual or technical breach, but, as a general rule, only for such as are material and willful, or, if not willful, so substantial and fundamental as to strongly tend to defeat the object of the parties in making the contract. Failure to perform in every respect is not essential, but a failure which leaves the subject of the contract substantially different from what was contracted for is sufficient. If the party who seeks rescission has an adequate remedy at law, ordinarily he is not entitled to rescind, but in case of repudiation, or of a breach going to the root of the contract, unless the damages can be ascertained with reasonable certainty, rescission is a matter of right, with restitution instead of compensation. In this case -the failure to perform was of a most substantial character and pervaded almost the entire contract. The road was not transformed into an electric road, nor extended to Keeseville, nor connected with the dock at Port Kent. It was still a steam road and for all practical purposes in the same condition as before the contract was made, but it had been incumbered for nearly three times the amount of the original issue of stock and bonds and the proceeds converted to their own use by Powers and Mansfield. There was such a failure to perform the substance of the contract as to defeat its purpose in nearly every, essential respect. Even if an action at law were possible to a [285]*285plaintiff suing in a representative capacity, it is obvious that the damages for such breaches of such a contract could not be estimated with precision.

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Bluebook (online)
199 N.Y. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callanan-v-keeseville-ausable-chasm-lake-champlain-railroad-ny-1910.