Clarke v. Brooks

1 Abb. Ct. App. 355
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Abb. Ct. App. 355 (Clarke v. Brooks) 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
Clarke v. Brooks, 1 Abb. Ct. App. 355 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

By the Court.

Hunt, J.

This action was brought for the purpose of closing the affairs of a partnership alleged to exist between the pfiain tiff and the defendants in the publication of the newspaper called the New York Express.

During the year 1864 an application was made and granted for the settlement of certain issues to be tried by a jury. After the trial of such issues by the jury, the plaintiff brought on the cause generally for a hearing and trial at special term, held in February, 1865, and moved for judgment on the findings of the jury. The motion of the plaintiff for judgment was granted, and the judgment order declared the rights of the parties to the subject matter of the partnership. It further directed a sale of the Express establishment under the direction of referee named, and ordered the referee to take and state an account of the partnership dealings and transactions. It also directed the payment of partnership debts, of costs and expenses; that "the referee file his report; and the question of the* plaintiff’s costs was reserved until the coming in of the report of the referee. This order also recited an order of the special term, made February 8, 1865, denying [357]*357a motion for a new trial of the issues submitted to the jury, founded upon a case containing the pleadings, the issues, the testimony, the findings of the jury, and exceptions. The order thus recited is not itself among the papers before us. The appeal to the general term from this latter order, and from the judgment order of February 21,1865, were apparently heard in one motion, and denied in one order on September 29, 1866. From this order an appeal was taken to this court by the defendants, and the plaintiff now moves to dismiss the same, on the ground that no appeal will lie from such order.

The judgment order of February 21, 1865, is not an appeal-able order. It is not a judgment of which a record has been made and filed; but an order for judgment simply. Considering it, however, as a judgment, it is not a final judgment, but interlocutory merely; and no appeal from a judgment as such lies to this court, except where the judgment is final. When the report of the referee shall have been made, and judgment entered therefor, additional questions may arise upon which the judgment of the special and the general term may be needed, and from which an appeal may be taken to this court. When it shall be thus brought up, the judgment will be final, and one appeal to this court will embrace all the questions thus presented, or that may be embraced in any previous order affecting the merits of the case. It is not the practice to allow a case to come to this court upon a fragmentary trial by installments, and in different forms. It can come once only, and in one form, when the merits are to be investigated. Until the conclusion of the reference, and the entry of final judgment upon it, no appeal can be brought to this court. Tompkins v. Hyatt, 19 N. Y. 534; Hollister Bank v. Vail, 15 Id. 593. It was stated upon the argument that a contrary decision had been made in Stevens v. Buffalo, Corning & New York R. R. Co., not reported. I am satisfied that this is an error. The affidavits in that case showed that an appeal was pending upon a final judgment subsequently made in the ease, and the motion to dismiss was denied, probably upon the ground that the first appeal was practically waived, and that a motion to dismiss the same was not justified, or it might have been denied upon the ground that the judgment became final [358]*358after the reference had been had, and the report of the referee confirmed by the court. 4 N. Y. (4 Comst.) 415. The opposing affidavits are not on file with the clerk of this court. Upon consultation with my brethren, they concur in the opinion that the rule is as I have stated it above, and that if any case has been decided differently, it has been done inadvertently, or without due consideration.

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21 N.E. 1020 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Abb. Ct. App. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-brooks-ny-1867.