Domschke v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.

42 N.E. 804, 148 N.Y. 337, 2 E.H. Smith 337, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 561
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 804 (Domschke v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co.) 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
Domschke v. Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co., 42 N.E. 804, 148 N.Y. 337, 2 E.H. Smith 337, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 561 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

Both parties have appealed to this court from the judgment entered upon the report of the referee and the modification thereof by the General Term. The defendants’ appeal rests upon certain exceptions taken at the trial, and the plaintiff’s upon the modifications made by the General Term whereby the provisions of the judgment awarding fee damages and an injunction were stricken out. It appears from the record that the testimony on both sides closed on the 26th. of January, 1893, and two weeks were given to counsel by the referee to submit briefs and requests for findings, the final submission to be made February 9, 1893. On the day so *342 appointed for the submission, the defendants’ counsel gave notice of a motion before the referee, to be heard on the following day, to open the case and be permitted to put in evidence a deed from the plaintiff to a grantee named therein, dated January 16, 1893, acknowledged and recorded January 20, 1893. . This deed purported • to convey the premises-described in the complaint, and it appeared by the affidavit of counsel for the defendants that the existence thereof did not come to his knowledge until February J, 1893. On the 24th of February, 1893, the referee made an order in the action granting the defendants’ motion to open the case and giving leave to the defendants to put the deed in evidence but for the-purpose only of showing the value of the premises in question. The ruling was that the deed might be admitted so far as it tended to show the value of the property at the date of its delivery and for no other purpose, and with no other effect. Subsequently the parties appeared before the referee and defendants’ counsel j>roduced the deed and offered the same in evidence. The case states that it was admitted by the referee for the purpose of showing the consideration so far as it tends to show the same, but not for any other purpose or with any other effect. The defendants’ counsel excepted to-the ruling refusing to admit the deed as evidence of the conveyance of the title from the plaintiff.

Subsequently, on the 3d of May, 1893, the referee made and delivered his report, in which .he found for the plaintiff generally, and found that the plaintiff then was and had been, during the times stated in the complaint, the owner of the premises, to which finding the defendants excepted. He refused, upon the defendants’ request, to find that the plaintiff had conveyed the premises by the deed in question, and to such refusal there was an exception.

The deed appears in full in the record, and the learned court below has held that full effect should have been given to it as a conveyance from the plaintiff by the referee, and that the finding and refusal to find as to the title was error. It does not appear from the order of the General Term that its *343 action proceeded upon the facts of the case or upon the exercise of any discretionary power on the part of the referee, and we must, therefore, assume that the modification rests upon a legal error committed in disregarding the deed as a conveyance divesting the plaintiff of his title to the premises, which was the subject of the controversy,

We think that the referee had power, upon an application by the defendants, to open the case and give further testimony to restrict such testimony or its legal effect to the question of value, and to thus limit the effect of the deed as evidence. The application was addressed to his sound discretion. He could have refused the application entirely or he could have permitted the defendants, as in legal effect he did, to give further proof of value and to restrict that proof, whatever its nature, to that question. The title of the plaintiff, so far as it was important as a basis for the injunction, or for the rental or fee damage, had been established and the defendants, at this stage of the case, had no absolute legal right to give proof to change the plaintiff’s relations to the property as they existed or appeared when the testimony was closed. There was no application made on the part of the defendants to interpose by supplemental answer a fact which transpired or became known subsequent to the close of the case and which transferred the title to another who was not a party. It is urged that such a pleading was not necessary, and this contention is probably correct since the measure of the plaintiff’s relief was to be determined by the situation existing at the close of the litigation. But the power of the referee to refuse in his discretion to re-open the case did not depend upon the state of the pleadings. When both parties at the trial announce that the proofs are all in, and the court or referee, acting upon this, adjourns the hearing to some future day for the purpose of hearing argument, neither has any legal right to recall his action or to have the case opened for the purpose of giving other or additional proofs. The case has, then, in the regular and orderly course of procedure, passed the stage when the examination of witnesses and the presentation of evidence is in *344 order, and while the court may and often does permit the parties to return to it and give further evidence I am not aware that it ever has been held to be an error of law to refuse. It is said that there was no objection by the plaintiff to the admission of the deed as evidence in the case generally, and it is true that the record does not show that there was. But the plaintiff having succeeded in the action the record on appeal was made up by the defendants and would not contain the objections of the successful party. The plaintiff’s counsel insisted upon the argument that the application to open the case was opposed by him, and when the deed was offered it was objected to, and he supports this position by his affidavit. While we are bound by the record as made up and certified, it can reasonably be inferred from the language of the order and from the subsequent proceedings, that the plaintiff objected on some ground to the admission of the deed. The defendants cannot, under the circumstances, now be permitted to question the ruling of the referee, upon the ground that it was made upon his own motion and not in response to an objection on the part of the plaintiff, unless the record affirmatively shows that such was the fact. We have no right, under the circumstances, to say that the referee acted upon his own motion merely because the record does not contain the statement that an objection was made. . The mere-fact that the record is silent concerning an objection from the successful party, does not enable the defendants to allege legal error with respect to a ruling of the referee, on the ground that the question was not raised for his decision in the usual and proper way.

The decision of the referee, restricting the effect of the deed as evidence to the question of value, was not only within his power, but was in fact not unjust or prejudicial to the defendants. The action was commenced in 1890 and the issues had been joified nearly three years-before the plaintiff executed the deed. In actions of this character, relating to real property in the city of Hew York, where many years must elapse before final judgment, it must frequently happen that the *345 plaintiff’s title is changed before or after judgment by conveyance, death, legal process or by some of the various methods by which title is transferred.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 804, 148 N.Y. 337, 2 E.H. Smith 337, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/domschke-v-metropolitan-elevated-railway-co-ny-1896.