Mora v. Great Western Insurance

10 Bosw. 622
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 24, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 10 Bosw. 622 (Mora v. Great Western Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mora v. Great Western Insurance, 10 Bosw. 622 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1863).

Opinion

By the Court—Bosworth, Ch. J.

The Code declares that “A trial is the judicial examination of the issues between the parties, whether they be issues of law or of fact.” (§ 252, [207.]) Though it has thus defined the word trial, it has not defined what is meant by the words,. “ the judicial examination of the issues between the parties,” otherwise than by the nature, force and effect of its provisions for a final disposition of such issues.

They probably include the action of both Court and Jury, in the cases where a verdict is rendered, and only the action of the Court or of Referees, when disposed of [624]*624by the Court without a jury, or by Referees on a reference. They do not necessarily require that the Court should hear the pleadings read, and that evidence should be given if the issues are those of fact, or an argument made if they are issues of law. On a demurrer to a complaint or auswer being regularly noticed for trial and placed on the calendar, where judgment is given for the party demurring, on the failure of the opposite party to appear,- the Court does not, ih fact, generally do more than hear the notice of trial read and affidavit of service. Tet the Court pronounces judgment, and in intendment of law makes all the examination necessary to enable it to decide correctly.

So, where issues of fact are noticed for trial, and the cause is placed on the calendar, and when it is reached and called in its order in open Court, the defendant appears and the plaintiff does not, and the defendant asks for a dismissal of the complaint, the Court is supposed to look into the pleadings sufficiently to ascertain if that be such a disposition “ as the case may require,” and if it dismisses the complaint, decides that it is; and that decision (if no motion be made to set it aside) is a final determination of the issues in that action.

In one case as-well as in the other, final judgment absolute, follows the decision. In both cases the cause is disposed of and decided by the action of the Court, at the place and in the manner provided by law for the trial of the action, and in both, the action of the Court constitutes a trial. In both, there has been a judicial, and all the actual examination of the issues between the parties, which the statute and the practice of the Courts have prescribed or require to reach jusband final results.

If the answer (as it may do) admits the cause of action stated in the complaint, and, as there stated, and sets up new matter as a defense, the Court would not dismiss the complaint but would allow the defendant to prove his defense and take a verdict. (Code, § 258, [213.])

In contemplation of law and of the Code, the Court, in [625]*625ordering a dismissal of a complaint, looks into the issues, and such action is taken as the nature of the issues requires, and the disposition of the cause thus made involves “the judicial examination of the issues,” within the meaning of those words as used in § 252.

The Code, by force of all its provisions found in the two chapters, entitled “Issues and the mode of trial,” and “Trial by Jury,” declares that a cause at issue may be brought to trial in the mode they describe, and that when thus brought to trial and disposed of, it has been tried within the meaning of the word trial, as therein used. It must be remembered that the titles of the several chapters of the Code are a part of the statute. And that, although the Code defines the meaning of the word “ trial,” it also prescribes the proceedings to be had thereat, and when all of the prescribed proceedings have been had, there has been a trial. And it is only by raising, by construction, a conflict between the Code’s definition of a trial, and its «prescribed proceedings to constitute a trial, that any confusion or doubt is created.

I think there was a trial in this case, not only within the meaning of that word, as used in the Code, but according to the very forms of a trial which it has prescribed for a case like the present; and that Dodd v. Curry, (4 How. Pr., 123,) Moffatt v. Ford, (14 Barb., 577,) and Rogers v. Degen, (10 Abb. Pr., 313,) were correctly decided. (See Bailey’s Dic.: Tryal, [in law.])

There having been a trial, the discretion of the Judge in respect to the amount of the allowance is not reversible on appeal.

That it was a proper case for an allowance, I entertain no doubt.

« The order should be affirmed.

Robertson, J.

The only question raised on this appeal, of any moment, is, what is intended by the expression, “ where a trial has been had," in the last clause of the 309th section of the Code. It is claimed that the meaning of the [626]*626term “ trial,” as used therein, is circumscribed by the definition given of it in section 252; it being substantially conceded that if it is not, the ordinary signification of the word will not sustain the plaintiffs’ position.

It is to be observed, in the first place, however, that while the fifteenth title of the Code, from section 462 to 467, inclusive, declares that certain words, when used in the Code, are to be understood in a certain sense, yet the words defined in section 252, and other sections, (§§ 1-5, 245-248,) are not declared to be used throughout the act in the sense prescribed. It would seem, therefore, that the framers of the Code, in making such distinction, intended that a general definition, without prescribing its use, was not intended to control the meaning of the word throughout the whole statute, where, by possibility, they might have used it in another sense.

But, assuming that the definition of a trial in section 252 controls the meaning of the word in the clause under consideration, it remains to be seen whether, after issue joined, or rather issues made, between- the parties, and a notice given of the trial of the same, a judgment rendered by the Court, dismissing the complaint, is the result of a judicial examination of such issues; and here we stumble at the threshold, since the meaning of the word “judicial,” as there employed, may form a subject of controversy, as it admits of various interpretations. It is defined as “relat-? ing to, practiced in, proceeding from, or issued by a Court of justice, emanating from a Judge, juridical, (Worcester), and “juridical” is defined as “relating to the dispensation of justice.” (Id.) In such a wide range of meaning, limited only by its pertaining to a Court of justice, there is nothing greatly to narrow or distinguish the character of the examination intended, unless we take “judicial” to designate something done in a Court, or by a Judge, as distinguished from clerical acts. In section 245, a judgment is defined to be the final determination of the rights of the parties. The- next section (246) provides, in its first subdivision, that the Clerk upon mere proof of the service of the sum[627]*627mens, shall, in certain actions, “enter judgment” for the amount claimed in such summons, or, if the complaint be not sworn to, in certain other actions, “assess” the damages thereon, and in still other cases, “ascertain” the amount due by proof. The second subdivision of that section provides that the plaintiff may apply to the Court for the relief demanded by him; and the Court may take certain means of ascertaining damages by a reference to a Jury; and the notice which is to be given to a party appearing is designated as being “ of the time and place of

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Bluebook (online)
10 Bosw. 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mora-v-great-western-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1863.