Law v. Jackson ex dem. Lansing

8 Cow. 746
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 Cow. 746 (Law v. Jackson ex dem. Lansing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Law v. Jackson ex dem. Lansing, 8 Cow. 746 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1826).

Opinion

*Jones, Chancellor,

delivered the opinion of the court. This is a motion for leave to withdraw the assignment of errors, with a view to allege diminution, and pray a certiorari to the supreme court, to certify to this court the bill of exceptions supposed to remain in that court.

Opposition is made to the motion, on grounds that well deberve the consideration of the court. The objection of the rnosi serious aspect is, the deferred period of the application. 'The cause has been heard, and the court has taken time to make up an opinion upon it. The difficulty which occasions the present application, was made at the hearing; but the party whom it affected took no step to remove it; and now, when he finds it an insuperable bar to his relief, he applies to the court to delay its judgment, for the purpose of giving him an opportunity to obviate it by bringing up the record, which ought to have been sent in the first instance. These objections would probably have been conclusive, if the decision of this court had been upon the merits. If the record had been such as to enable us to consider the points adjudicated by the supreme court, and intended to be reviewed, though the case might have been defectively or partially presented, and the question have come up disadvantageously to one of the parties, the court [748]*748must have held him concluded, and could not have listened # to his complaint.

[747]*747Object of mo tion.

Objections.

Delay.

[748]*748But the merits of this case have not been brought before the court, and could not be considered. If we proceed now to give judgment on the record before us, the judgment of the court will be upon a record which never was before the supreme court for their consideration; and no one question in controversy between the parties before that court, or in this, will be touched by the decision. It is true, that the return tó the writ of error presents us with the record of a judgment perfect in itself; but it is equally true, that the record so presented is a mere form; and that the question intended to be reviewed by this court, could not appear upon that record, but must be embodied in another and a distinct record, containing the bill of exceptions taken at the trial of the cause. „ We cannot --shut our eyes to this state of the cause. The return to the writ of error, though informal and substantially defective, distinctly shows what was intended by the parties, and by the supreme court. The history of the case, as collected from that return, is this: that the parties at the trial made a case for the opinion of the supreme court, with liberty to either of them to turn that case into a special verdict or bill of exceptions, for the purpose of bringing the questions of law which it involved before this court, for ultimate decision. We have before us the written consent of both the parties to that arrangement. It appears that the case was argued before the supreme court, and a judgment rendered by that court upon it. It would seem that the failing party then elected to turn the case into a bill of exception; and a writing, purporting to be the record of a bill of exceptions, is annexed to the writ of error as a part of the return to it. But that document cannot be the true bill of exceptions, for it does not conform to the direction of the statute, being sealed by the chief justice of the supreme court, and not by the judge who tried the cause; and it is moreover in itself informal and imperfect. It is to bring up the record of the bill of exceptions, which the circuit judge who tried the cause allowed, that the plaintiff in error wishes the cer[749]*749^orar^ he contemplates moving for. If the want of that record had been alleged for diminution, before the assign* ment of errors, the certiorari would have issued of course; and if application had been made for leave to withdraw the assignment of errors, for the purpose of alleging diminution, at any time before the argument, the court, on reasonable cause shown for it, would have granted it.

[748]*748Facts,

[749]*749The difficulty is, that this application comes after argument ; but I incline to think that we ought, under the special circumstances of this case, to relieve the party, even at this late stage of the cause.' My reason is, that the court has not, in fact, had the record before it which the parties intended to bring up, and upon which they have argued. There is no record of any bill of exceptions before *this court. It follows, that either the agreement of the parties to turn the case into, a special verdict or bill of exceptions, has not been carried into execution, or the bill of exceptions yet remains in the supreme court. If the agreement has not been carried into execution, it yet remains to be executed, and I must intend that it will be carried into effect by the parties to it; and if it has been executed, and the case turned into a bill of exceptions, then the returning officer has neglected to send up the bill of exceptions to this court, and has sent, in its place, a substitute which we cannot receive. In either case, a certiorari must go to bring before us the record on which we are to act, or no judgment can be rendered by this court upon the questions which have been decided by the supreme court. I am not willing to place the adjudication of this court upon the record of the judgment of the supreme court alone, because I know that judgment, separately from the bill of exceptions, to be mere form, and not intended to present any question for the decision of this court.

It is said that the party acted at his peril, in bringing up an improper record, and ought to be concluded by the act; but the difficulty is, that he has not brought up an imperfect or defective record of a bill of exceptions. He has brought up no bill of exceptions at all; but the cáse itself, which was to be turned into a bill of exceptions. It may [750]*750be the right of the plaintiff in error to have the case turned into a bill of exceptions; and if difficulties should occur in settling it, he may be entitled to the aid of the court to which the jurisdiction belongs, for the removal of them. But we have no power to substitute any other record for that which is now before us, and viewing the record now before us as the return of the case itself, and not the judgment which the supreme court gave upon the case, (for I put the mere formal record of judgment out of the. question,) I should, if obliged to give a decision upon it, be inclined, if at liberty to do so, to assimilate it to a writ of error brought upon affidavits, and dismiss or quash the writ. There may be difficulties in giving the case that direction; and as I cannot reconcile it to my sense of propriety, "unless from imperious necessity, to pronounce a judgment of affirmance without deciding upon the merits, when I feel satisfied that both parties intended that the decision should be upon the merits, and when the judgment might possibly be peremptory and conclusive, I prefer granting the application for leave to withdraw the assignment of errors, in the hope that the bill of exceptions may be brought up, and this court be enabled to examine and decide the questions it may present for adjudication.

It is objected that this court cannot, in the sound exercise of its discretion, take that course; and authorities are cited, to show that similar applications have been refused by óther courts of appellate jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Cow. 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/law-v-jackson-ex-dem-lansing-nycterr-1826.