Hoyt v. . Thompson's

19 N.Y. 207
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 19 N.Y. 207 (Hoyt v. . Thompson's) 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
Hoyt v. . Thompson's, 19 N.Y. 207 (N.Y. 1859).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 209

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 210 At the last December term we affirmed the decision of the Superior Court of the city of New York, awarding a new trial in this cause, and we gave final judgment against the plaintiff, pursuant to the stipulation into which he entered on bringing the appeal. The case was important in the sum of money involved, and the evidence, both oral and documentary, was voluminous. The conclusions of fact found at the trial were, in some material respects, indistinctly stated, inducing a necessity of examining the case at large in order to arrive at correct results. Influenced by these considerations, we allowed the remittitur to be stayed after the decision in December, in order to afford the appellant an opportunity of moving for a reärgument. That motion has been made, and the case has now been reëxamined with the attention it deserves. *Page 211

In the first place it will be proper to consider the nature and scope of an appeal to this court, where, as in this case, the order appealed from reverses the judgment rendered at the trial, and awards a new trial. In such cases, it is made, by statute, a condition of the right of appeal, that the appellant shall enter into a written stipulation that judgment absolute be rendered against him, provided the order granting the new trial shall be affirmed; and it is declared to be the duty of this court to pronounce such final judgment, if no error is found in the decision. (Code of Procedure, § 11.) The general policy of this statute is well understood. In very many litigations there is no dispute about the facts on which the rights of the parties depend. In such cases a reversal in the subordinate court of the judgment given at the trial, and an award of a new trial, will, in substance and effect, determine the whole controversy, so far as that court is concerned, and the expense and delay of another trial and appeal, before the decision of this court can be had on the questions of law involved, would seem to be entirely useless. The Legislature, therefore, deemed it expedient to allow a direct appeal to this court, in order to avoid such delay and expense, annexing, however, as a condition, that the party against whom the reversal has been pronounced, shall waive a new trial in case his appeal shall be determined against him, and consent to a final judgment. Before taking such an appeal, therefore, he necessarily determines for himself that no further or better conclusions of fact can be found in his favor, and that on a new trial judgment must be given against him.

In the present case the reversal of the plaintiff's judgment and the award of a new trial, were based, in part, at least, upon views of the testimony and conclusions of fact somewhat different from those entertained by Mr. Justice HOFFMAN, and embraced in the Case made at the trial before him. The Superior Court had undoubted power and right to examine the evidence at large, and upon the whole case, including the law and the facts, to set aside the judgment. The power and the duty of this court are more limited. We are simply *Page 212 to determine whether any error was committed by the court below in ordering a new trial. Questions of fact are not before us. In appeals of this kind, if the judgment rendered at the trial has been reversed upon conclusions of fact different from those found by the jury, the judge or the referee, we must, I think, examine the case at large far enough to be satisfied that those conclusions are not entirely unsupported by any evidence. If, on such examination, a question of fact appears, we cannot review the determination of that question, made by the court below in reversing the judgment, although such determination is opposed to the verdict of the jury or the finding of the judge. The distinction is, that the subordinate courts, in reviewing trials, have the power of passing upon questions of fact as well as law, while the office of this court is to correct errors of law only. It necessarily results that a party who appeals from an order granting a new trial, and stipulates for final judgment in case the order be affirmed, concedes to his adversary every conclusion of fact which is supported, however slightly, by the evidence. If he is unwilling to make such a concession, and to rest his appeal wholly upon the law of the case, then he should be advised, instead of appealing, to acquiesce in the reversal of his judgment, and to go down to another trial.

In the case before us having come to a conclusion that a reärgument ought not to to be granted, I proceed to indicate the grounds on which we think that the judgment already pronounced is correct. We should have been quite content if the case had gone to a second trial, according to the decision of the court below. But we had no power to give it that direction. Either the plaintiff was entitled to a reversal of that decision and an affirmance of the judgment which he recovered at the trial, or the defendant, on the stipulation which he entered into on bringing his appeal, was entitled to a final judgment against him. Between these alternatives there was no middle course.

The precise point in controversy is, whether the plaintiff or one Abraham G. Thompson became entitled to a bond and *Page 213 mortgage of $60,000, executed in November, 1839, by the Long Island Railroad Company, a corporation chartered by this State, to the Morris Canal and Banking Company. The last mentioned company was a New Jersey corporation, and held and owned this security until December 9, 1840, when an assignment of it was made to the State of Michigan. Thompson claimed title and acquired possession of the security under this transfer, having purchased it at auction from the agent of Michigan, in May, 1843. The plaintiff claims under a transfer, junior in point of time, made to one Sanxay his immediate assignor, by the receivers of the Morris Canal and Banking Company, on the 13th of November, 1845. Those receivers were appointed in January, 1842, by the Court of Chancery of the State of New Jersey, in a suit instituted against the Company in August, 1841, by Richards and Selden, who were its judgment creditors. If the plaintiff can impeach the prior transfer to the State of Michigan and the title which the plaintiff derived from that State, no doubt exists in regard to the validity of his own title. The validity of that assignment to Michigan is denied by the plaintiff on two grounds: First, that it was made by the executive officers of the company without the authority of the board of directors, in other words, that it was not the act of the corporation, and for that reason was utterly void. Second, on the ground that it was voidable as to creditors, under an act of the Legislature of New Jersey, passed February 16, 1829, "To prevent frauds by incorporated companies." These two grounds of objection have no dependence on each other, and they will, therefore, be separately considered.

First. The Morris Canal and Banking Company was authorized by its charter, granted in 1824, to construct a canal in the State of New Jersey, and also to carry on the business of banking; to buy and sell bills of exchange; to deal in public and corporate stocks; to loan money on bond and mortgage; to receive money or property in trust and to execute trusts.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.Y. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-thompsons-ny-1859.