People v. Albany & Susquehanna Railroad

8 Abb. Pr. 122, 39 How. Pr. 49
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Abb. Pr. 122 (People v. Albany & Susquehanna Railroad) 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.

Bluebook
People v. Albany & Susquehanna Railroad, 8 Abb. Pr. 122, 39 How. Pr. 49 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1870).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

The parties to this motion are all defendants in this action, and it will be most convenient to designate them as the Church party and the Ramsey party, respectively. The judgment which this motion seeks to have set aside was entered, and the judgment roll filed on December 31, 1869, about two o’clock in the afternoon, as appears from the papers. This judgment was in favor of the Ramsey party, and against the Church party. On the same day, and after said judgment had been entered, the counsel for the Church party residing at Rochester, where said action was tried and judgment entered, caused a notice of appeal from said judgment to the general term of the supreme court to be prepared, and also an undertaking, in due form of law, and the same were served in due form upon the attorney for the Ramsey party and upon the attorney of the railroad company, on January 1, 1870, and within twenty-four hours after the entry of said judgment, and the said appeal was thereupon perfected. This appeal, as is shown by the moving papers, _was brought in good faith by the parties appealing, who intend to prosecute the same to a determination at the general term of this court, and is now pending.

This motion, to set aside the judgment for irregularity, was not made until several days after the appeal to [131]*131the general term was perfected. The notice hears date January 3, 1870, and the principal affidavit on which such motion is founded, was not made, or was not sworn to, until the 4th of the same month. The motion papers were, of course, served after this, though I do not find the precise date of the service among the papers. It^appears very clearly_and plainly from the moving~papers,~and, indeed, the contrary is not pretended, that the counsel for the moving party knew, and were fully aware, of all the acts and omissions on the part of the attorney and counsel of the Ramsey party, in whose favor the judgment was rendered and entered, before and at the time such judgment was entered, and before the appeal to the general term was brought and perfected.

Upon this state of facts all the irregularities complained of up to and including the entry of the judgment and filing the judgment roll, if such they were, ■ have been waived and cured by the appeal to the general term, and are no longer available to the party against whom the judgment is rendered. Conceding the purposes of this point, that the things complained of were' irregularities for which the judgment would have been set aside had the [defeated party taken advantage of them in due season, still having passed them by, and taken another and different step in the action, they can not now go back and take up these alleged irregularities, and have them passed upon as though they were still Open and available. They have each and all been waived, and forever cured by the appeal. It was an onward step -in the action, without regard to the irregularities, which were as well known to the moving parties then as now, and which placed all the parties in a new and different relation to each other. This principle "of waiver of irregularities in proceedings in actions, on the part of any party, who might have taken advantage of them had he chosen to do so, by moving in the action afterwards as though the proceedings had been regular, [132]*132has "been so long established in practice, and is so well settled, that it admits of no doubt or question. The exception is that the waiver does not extend to irregularities of which the party was wholly ignorant when the subsequent steps were taken.

I shall not undertake to cite authorities on this question. The books are full of cases on the subject, and the principle is as old as the history of practice and proceedings by action. Had not the contrary doctrine been strenuously -contended for by the several eminent counsel of the moving parties, I should not have supposed that any doubt could have existed in the minds of the profession in regard to it. ,

The case cited and relied upon as containing a different doctrine is that of Clumpha v. Whiting (10 Abb. Pr., 448).

But that case, it will be seen, affords no countenance to the position contended for by the moving parties. In that case the plaintiff had entered a judgment and issued an' execution while an order to stay his proceedings was in force.

On March 2 the defendant moved, by an order to show cause, to set aside the judgment and execution for irregularity ; and on the 22nd of the same month, while the motion to set aside was still pending, and undisposed of, the defendant gave notice of appeal from the judgment to the general term. It was claimed in that case by the plaintiff, that the defendant had, by appealing,, waived the irregularity in the entry of the judgment, and issuing execution; but the judge at special term , held that the appeal in that case was no waiver of the irregularity, which the defendant had taken advantage of by motion before the appeal was brought, and which motion was still pending. This was a special term decision, "but I am of the opinion it is correct in principle.

The same rule has, I think, been applied more than once in-"this district, where the party after moving and-taking advantage of the irregularity, has brought his [133]*133appeal to save that right also, and prevent the time for appealing from passing by, before the motion could be heard. This-gives a party the benefit of all the remedies which the law affords, if he is diligent taking his advantage in time.

i • But this is quite a different case. Here the alleged irregularities had not been noticed or taken advantage, of by motion or otherwise, until after they had been waived and cured by the appeal. It was then clearly too-late. The appeal had. consigned them all to the 11 dead past,” beyond recall or resuscitation.

This view alone disposes of all questions of mere irregularity in entering and perfecting the judgment, assuming that it became and was a perfect judgment, so far as to be reviewable upon appeal

I might safely rest this question upon this view, and should do so in any ordinary case. But this is a case of much more than ordinary importance, and it is perhaps due to it that it should not be allowed to rest upon a technical waiver of irregularities, if there is a better and surer foundation on which the judgment can stand.

Now, granting that every material allegation of fact in the moving papers is strictly true, there was no irregularity in the proceedings prior to, and including the entry of the judgment, whatever.

The counsel for the defeated party had no more right to be present at the finding of the facts by the judge, or to dictate, or have a voice in regard to what such finding should be, than he would have had to intrude'into the jury room, had the case been tried by a jury, and dictate to, or advise with tketii in regard to _ what should be their verdict. The assumption of such i a right is simply monstrous. Counsel have their day in the trial and summing up the cause. They have no right to any further hearing, until after the decision has been made, and rendered, as the law prescribes. When the trial is ended, and the cause submitted, the law devolves the duty of deciding it upon the judge before [134]*134whom the trial is had, where the action is tried without a jury, and prescribes the form in which his finding and decision shall be rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Abb. Pr. 122, 39 How. Pr. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-albany-susquehanna-railroad-nysupct-1870.