East River Bank v. Kennedy

4 Keyes 279
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Keyes 279 (East River Bank v. Kennedy) 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
East River Bank v. Kennedy, 4 Keyes 279 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

A doubt was suggested on the argument of this appeal, whether, inasmuch as the order of reversal herein made in the Superior Court at General Term, does not state that such reversal was ordered upon questions of fact, any questions could be considered in this court except such questions of law as were raised by exceptions taken on the trial. And, on that suggestion, the counsel for the respondent moved the court to permit the case to stand over, to enable him to procure an amendment of the order of reversal in the court below, so that it might appear by the record that the reversal was upon all the grounds stated in the opinions pronounced in that court when the order appealed from was made.

If a judgment rendered on the trial of an action by the [284]*284court without a jury, or by a referee, be reversed in General Term, such reversal is to be deemed made upon questions of law, unless it appears in the order of reversal that it was made on questions of fact; and, when it does not so appear, the review in this court is confined to questions of law raised on the trial and made the subject of exception. This is by express statute, and we have no discretion. (Code, §§ 268,272.)

Those sections have no application to an order reversing an order of the Special Term, setting aside a verdict, and ordering a new trial after a trial by jury.

Prior to 1851, the decisions were uniform, that under section eleven of the Code, this court had no jurisdiction to review an order granting a new trial. (See 3 Comst. 545; 2 id. 563 ; 1 id. 610.) The court held not only that such an order was'not final, and therefore not appealable, but they also held, in numerous cases of appeals from judgments on reports of referees, that they had no jurisdiction to review questions of fact upon a case, though sought by appeal from the judgment. (2 Comst. 189, 502.) ' •

In 1851, the legislature amended section eleven of the Code, so as to allow an appeal to this court from an order granting a new trial; and the question thereupon arose, what may be reviewed on such an appeal % In Moore v. Westervelt (1 Code R., N. S. p. 415), the court held that this amendment did not include new trials upon a case involving questions of fact, but only where questions of law are involved in such order.

In 1852, the amendment of 1851, in the particular mentioned, was repealed.' But in 1857, the section was again amended so as to give an appeal from an order granting a new trial; and in 1862, this was extended so as to .embrace an order refusing a new trial, and so the Code now remains. e But, according to the decision in Moore v. Westervelt, this does not bring under review questions of fact, as upon a case, such as that the verdict.is against the weight of the evidence, or where the motion is founded upon alleged surprise or newly discovered evidence, but questions of law only.

It is deemed the purpose and policy of the legislature to [285]*285leave questions of fact to be settled by the courts of original jurisdiction, giving an appeal to this court where the rules of law are claimed to have been erroneously determined. This general policy is departed from in the two instances above referred to, viz., where a cause is tried by the court or b"y a referee, and a reversal is ordered upon questions of fact. But, as already remarked, the sections authorizing us to review the facts in those cases do not extend to cases tried by a jury.

As this is a question appertaining to our jurisdiction, it would be of no avail to insert, in the order below, that the reversal was had upon questions of fact shown by a case on which the motion for a new trial was made, except to lay the foundation for a motion to dismiss the appeal.

We should still have no power to consider the propriety of the order so made.

Where; therefore, a case is made containing exceptions raising questions of law, those questions and those only can be considered here. If it does not appear in some form that the order granting a new trial was founded upon questions of fact, we must assume that the order was granted for supposed errors in law to which due exception was taken.

But it certainly ought not to be in the power of a party, against whom a new trial had been ordered, upon questions of fact, to avoid the order by appealing to this court and here showing that no errors of law were committed on the trial. If here questions of law "only can be considered on the appeal, that would be an effectual mode of retaining a verdict which was against the weight of the evidence, or which for any reason was unsatisfactory to the court below, who have a discretion to order a new trial if the ends of justice require it.

How then shall this be avoided ? If, after such an order, the party appeals, this court must, if the appeal be entertained, reverse it. This would be palpably unjust, and it is a result which was certainly not intended by the legislature when the jurisdiction of this court" was confined to questions of law in cases tried by a jury. Such a result is not necessary.

[286]*286The party obtaining a new trial upon questions of fact must see to it, that it be made to appear, by the record or in some other proper manner, that the new trial was ordered upon question's of fact; and then there is no danger and can be no injustice in the rule, for then the appeal would be like an appeal from an order granting a new trial on the ground of surprise or newly discovered evidence, and would be dismissed on motion.

The court practice may, therefore, be stated thus: .When the court below set aside a verdict and grant a new trial, on the ground that the verdict is against evidence or is unsatisfactory, or on the ground of surprise of of newly discovered evidence, or for other reasons resting in the facts only, or in the discretion of the court to grant a new trial, the order is not reviewable in this court in any form, and the order granting a new trial should state that it is granted upon questions of fact, or in some form it should so clearly appear by the record.

Where the verdict is set aside and a new trial is ordered for errors in law, this court has jurisdiction to review the order, the proper stipulation being given by the appellant consenting to final judgment if the order be affirmed.

Where the record does not in some form show that the order for a new trial was based upon questions of fact, it must be assumed here that the order was granted for errors • in law committed at the trial, and if the court find no such errors the order must be reversed.

Where the appeal is from an order refusing a new trial, questions of law only can arise on the hearing of the appeal.

The question of law raised by an exception will, it is true, often render an examination of the evidence, or portions of it, necessary; e. g., an exception to the granting or refusing a nonsuit, or to the submission of the question to the jury when there is no evidence in the case to warrant such a submission, and other cases might be suggested; but in these the question to be here considered is nevertheless a question of Iqw arising on the trial, and appropriately raised by exception there taken.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Keyes 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-river-bank-v-kennedy-ny-1868.