Fish v. Weatherwax

2 Johns. Cas. 215
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1801
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 Johns. Cas. 215 (Fish v. Weatherwax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fish v. Weatherwax, 2 Johns. Cas. 215 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1801).

Opinion

Benson, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. There may he a judgment, for the insufficiency of the declaration or plea, as the case may be, against the party, though there may be a verdict for him. If the party for whom a verdict is found, will not move for judgment, the other party may pray for judgment against himself; but the entry on the record will still be as if the judgment had been on the prayer of the party for whom the judgment was found. And where a party prays to have judgment rendered against him, to the intent, that he may bring a writ of error, he is entitled to have it so rendered against him, as matter of right.

Where the verdict is for the plaintiff, if the defendant, in stead of letting the plaintiff take a judgment for himself, prays only that the court, omitting to render judgment, shall, as their final act in the cause, say to the parties, that they may go without any further day given to them to appear again; and if the plaintiff, when the court have declared their opinion against him, does not pray judgment against himself, the judgment, *in such case, is said to be arrested, as distinguished from the case where it is rendered : for, according to the ordinary, though, perhaps, improper sense of the expression, a judgment is said to be arrested, when the court, by an interlocutory act, award a new trial, or repleader, or other further proceedings ; and where the party for whom the verdict was given, must still so further proceed, until there shall finally be a judgment in the cause, and then, on a writ of error, he may have judgment on the verdict, if entitled to it, and the judgment of the court, in awarding the further proceedings, and of consequence the proceedings themselves, be reversed. The arresting of judgment, however, in the present case, is the final act of the court; and the question is, whether it is such a judgment, as that a writ of error will lie upon it.

In some cases, where a judgment is rendered against the plaintiff, it will be a bar to an another action for the same cause, and his only remedy is, by a writ of error, to have the judgment reversed ; but if the remedy, where the judgment is arrested, is also by writ of error, then the law, to be consistent with itself, must make an arrest of judgment a bar to a new action, in the same cases where the rendering of judgment is a bar. But as the arrest of judgment is not, by law, a bar in any case, the inference must be, that a writ of error will not lie on it.

That this is the law, is further evident, from the form of the entry where the judgment is arrested, and the form of the court of errors. In the first case the entry is, “ omitting the rendering of judgment,” &c. in the latter case, the writ of error states, that in rendering judgment, manifest error,” &c.

If, then, the plaintiff has no remedy by a writ of error, he must have it by a writ of mandamus ; though, strictly speaking, he is not entitled to his rule, before he has prayed the court below to render judgment against *himself, for until then there is no default in the judge of the inferior court; yet as this case is new, and to prevent [217]*217delay, the court will grant a special rule, that if the judges of the court below shall refuse, on the prayer of the plaintiff, to render judgment against himself, and for the defendant, that then they show cause by the first day of the next term, why a mandamus should not issue to them to proceed to judgment in the cause.(

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Bluebook (online)
2 Johns. Cas. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-weatherwax-nysupct-1801.