McMahon v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance
This text of 12 Abb. Pr. 28 (McMahon v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance) 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.
Opinion
—Two objections are made to the reversal of the order of the special term. 1. That the order is not appealable. 2. That the order was right upon the merits.
1. As to the. appealability of the order. If the judge at the special term had put his decision upon the ground that the facts disclosed on the application did not, as addressed to his judicial discretion, show a fit case for the equitable interference of the court, or bring it within the ordinary rule, that a party who is defeated in an action with costs shall not be permitted to insti[30]*30tute a new suit for the same cause without paying the costs of the first action, and there was reasonable ground for such conclusions of the judge upon the facts presented to him, I should incline to think the order not appealable. There is no absolute right in a defendant to demand the judgment of the court, forbidding the prosecution of a second suit until the costs of a former action are paid. It is an equity depending generally upon the circumstances of each particular case, and addressed very much to the sound discretion of the judge to whom the application is made. I do not say that no case can be presented where the equity would not be so strong, that, if the judge refused to recognize it, an appeal would not lie. I do not regard it as necessary to decide that question. Moreover, it is very much a question of practice, regulated by courts for themselves, and as to which the practice is not absolutely uniform in different courts.
But in this case, the judge who denied this motion did not • proceed so far in the case as to exercise his discretion, at least not upon this branch of the case. He put his decision upon the ground that the Superior Court committed an error in awarding costs to the defendants—indeed, that their judgment was void for want of jurisdiction to award costs. In this I think he erred. I found my conclusion mainly upon the reasons stated in the opinion of the Superior Court, and in the Massachusetts case there cited (McMahon a. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, 3 Bosw., 644; S. C., 8 Abbotts' Pr., 291; Hunt a. Inhabitants of Hanover, 8 Metc., 343).
[31]*31I think, therefore, the ground upon which the judge at the special term placed his decision is untenable, and that'such decision being upon a point of law which involves, a substantial right, and not founded upon discretion or a mere question of practice, is reviewable. The judge did not exercise his discretion, but refused to do so, placing his decision upon the invalidity of a judgment which was unquestioned by the parties themselves.
2. As to the merits of the original application, they have not been considered by the court below upon the grounds upon which they were placed by the defendant, and should not, I think, be considered here. If we have the right to determine them upon appeal when they have never been determined in the court below, I do not deem it expedient to do so in the present case. Upon that branch of the case we should not, in doing so, be exercising the appropriate function of an appellate tribunal, which is to review an actual determination of the inferior court. It does not appear but that if the judge at special term had passed the point of jurisdiction, he would have decided in favor of the defendants and granted their motion. In my opinion, the proper course for us to pursue is to reverse the order of the special term, and, under the circumstances, without costs, and without prejudice to the defendants renewing their application at the special term, upon the same or other or additional papers.
Bonney, J., concurred.
Sutherland, J., dissented.
Present, Sutherland, Bonnet, and Hogeboom, JJ.
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