Mitchell v. Westchester Fire Insurance

6 Daly 452
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Daly 452 (Mitchell v. Westchester Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Westchester Fire Insurance, 6 Daly 452 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the general term of the Marine Court, affirming an order made by the judge at special term granting a new trial on a motion made upon his minutes to set aside a verdict.

The notice of appeal from such order of the general term does not contain an assent on the part of the appellant, that if the order be affirmed judgment absolute shall be rendered against the appellant, as required by sec. 9 of ch. 545 of the Laws of 1874, which was made an absolute condition of any such appeal.

The appeal taken from this order was not upon any “ case or exceptions ” made, for a review of an erroneous decision of the judge or jury on the trial, under sec. 268 of the Code, but upon a statement of facts as to the occurrences on the trial, which ought of right, and is presumed to have been, a copy of the testimony given and other matters transpiring thereon, as contained in the judge’s minutes used on the motion for a new trial made before him, and upon which it was granted by the judge.

[453]*453In the progressive legislation as to the jurisdiction and proceedings in the Marine Court, an order of the general term granting a new trial was not appealable to this court as an actual ■determination of the controversy in that court (Frank v. Benner, 3 Daly, 422), until the act of 1874 (ch. 545, p. 731), section b of which, while providing for appeals from the general term •of that court in the manner prescribed in section 352 of the Code, from such an actual determination at such general term, within twenty days after written notice of such judgment, also allowed an appeal to be taken in like manner from an order granting a new trial, provided the notice of appeal contained an assent on the part of the appellant that if the order be affirmed, judgment absolute should be rendered against the appellant. The subsequent act of 1875, ch. 479, sec. 43 (Sess. Laws, p. 549), provided that the appeals authorized by law, from the general term of said Marine Court, shall be taken within twenty days after written notice of the judgment, and the notice of appeal and the undertaking to be given thereupon shall be in the same form as upon an appeal from the special to the general term of the Court of Common Pleas, and the case upon appeal shall be printed and heard in the same manner as appeals from the special to the general term of said court are now conducted and heard therein.”

This relieves the appellant from the necessity of specifying the alleged grounds of error upon which the appeal is founded, as was previously required by sec. 353 of the Code. The sec. 43 of the act of 1875, further provides: “ When the appeal is taken from an order granting a new trial upon a case or exceptions, if the appellate court determines that no error was committed in granting the new trial, it may render judgment absolute upon the right of the appellant,” &c.

The affirmance upon appeal by the general term of the order originally made in this action to set aside the verdict, and for the granting of a new trial upon the judge’s minutes, under sec. 264 of the Code, was on an appeal to the general term authorized by sec. 349 of the Code.

But the appeal from such an order of affirmance was not an-appeal from a judgment, and if regarded as an original order [454]*454granting a new trial, could only be effectual under the act of 18Y4, ch. 345, when the notice of appeal contained the assent of the appellant that if the order should be affirmed, judgment absolute should be rendered against him.

The notice of appeal in the present case does not comply with that provision.

The 43d section of the act of 1875 has only relation to appeals then “ authorized ly law,” and none such was so authorized upon an appeal from an order granting a new trial, unless the notice of appeal was accompanied with ,the stipulation that if the order should be affirmed, judgment absolute should be rendered against the appellant. It also confined such right of appeal to one taken from an order granting a new trial upon a case or exceptions.

The motion for a new trial upon the judge’s minutes, is a. proceeding entirely distinct from such as may be made upon a case or exceptions (see Code, sec. 264, 268).

It is questionable whether the order of the general term appealed from is the order granting a new trial, within the meaning or purview of either the act of 1874 or 1875, and upon which an appeal to this court is allowed. Having been made by the judge who tried the cause, upon his minutes, the order of the general term was merely one affirming it on appeal, and it is doubtful whether or not it is an order of the general term setting aside a verdict and granting a new trial upon a case or exceptions, contemplated by either of the above mentioned statutes.

For these reasons I am of opinion this general term has no-jurisdiction of the present appeal, and that it should be dismissed with $10 costs.

Van Bbunt, J., concurred.

Appeal dismissed.

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Related

Frank v. Benner
3 Daly 422 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Daly 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-westchester-fire-insurance-nyctcompl-1876.