Columbia Bank v. Gospel Tabernacle Church

28 N.E. 29, 127 N.Y. 361, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 915, 82 Sickels 361, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1788
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 29 (Columbia Bank v. Gospel Tabernacle Church) 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
Columbia Bank v. Gospel Tabernacle Church, 28 N.E. 29, 127 N.Y. 361, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 915, 82 Sickels 361, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1788 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Potter, J.

The plaintiff claims the right to treat the case as a question of law simply arising upon a judgment of non-suit and that as there was some evidence of plaintiff’s claim, it would have had the right to go to a jury or in the absence of a jury to have the court or referee pass upon such evidence.

The answer is that the plaintiff by proposing and requesting findings, consented to and did in fact treat the case as one where the whole evidence was to be passed upon and which was in fact passed upon and findings made for plaintiff as well as defendant and so the referee properly dismissed the case upon the merits.

These facts appear from the case upon appeal; that at the close of the examination and cross-examination of plaintiff’s witness, the defendant’s counsel moved for a nonsuit which was granted and an exception taken by plaintiff.

It further appears that the referee proceeded to take the testimony and proofs offered, and having considered the same and the arguments of counsel thereupon, etc., and that the plaintiff duly submitted to the referee the following as to which he made the rulings as they respectively appear.

“ The plaintiff submits the following statement of the facts which it deems established by the evidence, and of the rulings upon questions of law which it requests the referee to make.”

The plaintiff prepared 26 findings of fact, a part of which were found and the rest refused or were found as modified, and four findings or conclusions of law and also took 28 exceptions of fact and to the refusal to find the conclusions of law.

*366 It should also be stated that the defendant’s counsel examined ¡and cross-examined all the witnessess called by plaintiff and some of them at great length and among the witnesses so ■examined were some of the trustees and the pastor of the .defendant.

Under these circumstances it seems to me that this court . should treat this appeal as an appeal from a judgment upon the merits as directed by the referee and not as a judgment of nonsuit, and that the plaintiff’s relief from having the judgment so treated was obtainable by a motion to correct the .■record in that respect.

The two cases relied upon by the appellant to support its -contention in that regard are Scofield v. Hermandez (47 N. Y. 313) and Forbes v. Chichester (30 N. Y. S. R. 350), but they are in some essentials unlike the case at bar. Both cases were claims presented against the estates of decedents and were referred under the statute. The proceedings in such cases are ¡statutory and special. (Roe v. Boyle, 81 N. Y. 305 ; Mowry v. Peet, 88 id. 453.)

In the former case (47 N. Y. supra), the referee at the close ¡of plaintiff’s or claimant’s evidence and upon motion of the . defendant granted a nonsuit to which plaintiff duly excepted •and the referee afterward made findings. It does not appear ■'that the defendant or the plaintiff submitted or requested the referee to make any findings or took any step in that ¡direction.

It moreover appears from the record that the case cited was .a judgment of nonsuit and not rfpon the merits.

In the case of Forbes v. Chichester (supra), the defendant : at the close of plaintiff’s case made a motion for a nonsuit and 'the referee-reserved his decision. He then wrote an elaborate ■ opinion based upon the plaintiff’s evidence at the conclusion of which he said-: “I think the defendant’s motion should be .-granted.”

After this the case was opened and the plaintiff put in 'further evidence and again rested and the defendant renewed his motion for a nonsuit. The defendant offered no testimony. *367 ‘The referee reserved his decision but later made findings of fact and granted the defendant’s motion for nonsuit.

It will be observed that the defendant did not in the cases cited, as was done in the case under consideration, propose or request any findings whether of law or fact and did not file any exception to the findings. The record in the case at bar shows an ordinary action at law and contains the requests and findings upon the part of both plaintiff and defendant and exceptions upon the part of the defendant and also that the judgment was for the defendant upon the meiits. Besides the defendant in this case by an examination of plaintiff’s witnesses proved affirmatively, among other facts, the fact that the ■defendant had no knowledge that Sniffen as its treasurer had ■opened an account with the plaintiff; that the defendant’s board of trustees never authorized or ratified the discounting of any notes for defendant; that the proceeds of the discount of the note in question made by “ The Tribune & Farmer Co. Limited ” and indorsed by Sniffen as treasurer, was applied at plaintiff’s bank to pay two notes given by Weed to Sniffen for his personal use and the balance of the proceeds, $628.25, were paid to Hubbard, plaintiff’s cashier on account of a personal transaction between him and Sniffen.

From the practice of the counsel upon the trial and evidence before the referee and upon which he made findings and defendant took exceptions, the character of the referee’s report •and the character and provisions of the judgment, I am very ■clear that the judgment was and was intended to be a judgment upon the merits and should be so treated upon the consideration of this appeal. (Von Derlip v. Keyser, 68 N. Y. 443.)

It might very properly be suggested in this connection that .as the form of the judgment being a judgment upon the merits, that the plaintiff should have moved to set the same aside for irregularity, if the conduct of the counsel and proceedings upon the trial did not call for such a judgment, or if such judgment was not intended or expected.

That would have been the ordinary and proper proceeding *368 and would, no doubt, have relieved this court from its present embarrassment in relation to that question and would also have changed very materially the line of argument of counsel upon this appeal.

If these views are correct, this appeal is to be considered and decided as an appeal from a judgment upon the merits and not as a judgment of nonsuit.

The case of the People's Bank v. St. Anthony's Roman Church (109 N. Y. 512) clearly settles these propositions of law in relation to religious corporations created under the act of 1813 (Chap. 60), and renders any further discussion of them unnecessary, viz: The trustees of a religious corporation organized under the act of 1813 (Chap. 60, Laws of 1813), as amended in 1863 (Chap. 45, Laws of 1863), have no separate or individual authority to bind the corporation; and this, although a majority or the whole number acting singly assent to the particular transaction, only when acting as a board can they perform or authorize acts binding on the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 29, 127 N.Y. 361, 38 N.Y. St. Rep. 915, 82 Sickels 361, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbia-bank-v-gospel-tabernacle-church-ny-1891.