Marx v. . Brogan

81 N.E. 231, 188 N.Y. 431, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1146
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 231 (Marx v. . Brogan) 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
Marx v. . Brogan, 81 N.E. 231, 188 N.Y. 431, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1146 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinions

*432 Werner, J.

This appeal comes to this court from a judgment entered upon a decision of the Appellate Division rendered after the hearing of a submitted controversy under section 1279, Code of Civil Procedure. The question decided by that court, which we are asked to review, is whether a building which the defendant proposes to build upon a parcel of land owned by him and located in 148th street, Hew York city, is of such a character that its erection will constitute a violation of a covenant designed to prevent the erection of a tenement house upon lands owned by the respective parties. The fate of this appeal depends wholly upon the nature of the issue embraced in the controversy submitted to the learned Appellate Division. If the submitted case presented a pure question of law, the Supreme Court had power to decide it and we are charged with the duty of reviewing the correctness of that decision; but if the question of law could not be decided without first disposing of conflicting or equivo cal inferences of fact, the court below was without jurisdiction, the judgment herein must be reversed and the proceeding dismissed.

The submission of controversies for judicial decision without litigation is of statutory birth.' It seems to have had its origin in this state in ,tlie report of the commissioners appointed to revise our practice and procedure under the Constitution of 1846. That report contained a section which the legislature adopted as part of the Code of Procedure of 1848 in which it was first designated as section 325, and later as section 372. It is now section 1279 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The portion of the present section which is material to the controversy at bar is substantially identical with the original enactment. It provides that, The .parties to a question in difference, which might be the subject of an action, being of full age, may agree upon a case, containing a statement of the facts; upon which the controversy depends; and may present a written submission thereof to a court of record, which would have jurisdiction of an action, brought for the same *433 cause.” In reporting the original section as one of the amendments to our procedure the commissioners said : “ This provision, it is believed, will be useful in many cases where a question as to a legal right exists between fair and honorable men, there being no dispute about the facts.”

The language of the statute, supplemented by the sentence quoted from the report of the commissioners, leaves no doubt as to the nature and scope of the proceeding described in the statute. It was not intended to embrace issues where any dispute of fact was involved, but was to be confined to causes depending wholly upon questions of law. That is the plain and unmistakable import of the words used in the statute. That was clearly the understanding of the commissioners who reported this amendment to our law of procedure, and that has been the view entertained by our courts since it has been a part of the two Codes referred to. (Neilson v. Com. Mut. Ins. Co., 3 Duer, 455; Clark v. Wise, 46 N. Y. 612; Fearing v. Irwin, 55 id. 486.) It seems obvious, therefore, that whenever it clearly appears that a submitted controversy necessarily involves the duty of drawing inferences from inconclusive, equivocal or evidentiary facts before a legal conclusion can be formed, it follows as a logical sequence that the issue is one which must be presented and decided in an action, and not in this statutory proceeding. This view is strongly reinforced by the decisions of other states where our statute has served as a model. While it cannot be said that these foreign decisions are absolutely uniform as to the jurisdictional powers of the courts in such proceedings, it may safely be affirmed that under statutes like ours there has been no substantial deviation from the view that the courts have no power to draw inferences of fact as distinguished from inferences of law. (Goodrich v. City of Detroit, 12 Mich. 279; Powers v. Provident Institute for Savings, 122 Mass. 443 ; Pray v. Burbank, 11. N. H. 290 ; Burr v. Des Moines R. R. & N. Co., 1 Wall. 99, 102; 1 Ency. PI. & Pr. 393 ; Mayhew v. Durfee, 138 Mass. 584; Hysinger v. Baltzell, 3 Grill & J. 159; Vansant v. Roberts, 3 Md. 119 ; Sawyer v. Corse, 17 Gratt. [Va.] *434 23b.) In Massachusetts and Maryland, under statutes which in their essential features are identical with our own, and in cases directly involving the question, the courts have laid down, what we regard as the correct rule. In Mayhew v. Durfee (supra) the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts states it as follows: “ When an action at law is submitted ujion agreed facts either to the Superior Court or to this court, only questions of law are submitted, and neither court can draw inferences of fact from the facts agreed, unless, as matter of law, they are necessary inferences.” In Maryland, in the case of Hysinger v. Baltzall (supra), the rule is stated to be that the court can “ make no inferences unless they be of law or are such as are clear, undeniable deductions from the statements agreed on. It is competent for the jury to draw inferences from testimony submitted to them, but that power is not extended to the court when required to act on a case stated where nothing can be supplied by implication.”

In the light of the history of our statute and the decisions which bear upon its scope and meaning, a short review of the facts submitted in the controversy at bar will disclose that they are not of such a conclusive character as to obviate or exclude the necessity of drawing inferences of fact essential to a complete determination of the controversy. On the contrary, the facts submitted are purely evidentiary in their nature, leaving the essential, decisive or ultimate fact to be decided by the court. As will be seen by reference to the record, the facts agreed upon are merely descriptive. They disclose the dimensions of the building which the defendant desires to erect; its external appearance; its internal arrangements ; the materials of which it is to be composed, and the estimated cost of the whole, with the rentals expected to be realized. Before a court can determine whether the proposed building would be in contravention of the terms of the covenant against the erection of a tenement house, it must first be decided whether this building as thus described is an apartment house within the definition of that term recently approved by .this court in Kilching v. Brown (180 N. Y. *435 414). It needs no argument to show that there may be cases in which the description of a building proposed to be erected so clearly fixes and discloses its real character that its status can be decided as a matter of law.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 231, 188 N.Y. 431, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marx-v-brogan-ny-1907.