Price v. Keyes

3 Thomp. & Cook 720, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 177
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Thomp. & Cook 720 (Price v. Keyes) 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
Price v. Keyes, 3 Thomp. & Cook 720, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 177 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

When the trial of this cause was completed at the circuit, the learned justice who presided ordered the exceptions, taken by the defendants, to be first heard at the general term, and judgment to be in the meantime suspended. The order in this respect was strictly in conformity with the provision made by section 265 of the Code of Procedure, and it was probably made, as such orders usually are, as a matter of practice, at the instance or solicitation, and to promote what may at the time have been considered the convenience, of the defendant. It is not important for the disposition of the case whether that was the fact or not, because the consequences of the order would be the same, even if it had been made at the instance of the learned justice himself; but such orders are not usually made in that way, particularly where the [722]*722defeated party manifests any disposition to withhold his assent. No snch dissent appears to have been indicated in the present case, and it is to be presumed that none existed.

By the. order made, the case was, in effect, sent to the general term for two purposes. First, to enable the defendants to move for a new trial upon their exceptions; and secondly, for judgment to . be pronounced there in case the motion should prove unsuccessful. Where exceptions are taken, the Code has provided for three different modes of reviewing them; it may be done by an appeal from the judgment, by a motion for a new trial upon them at the general term, under such an order as was made in this case, and by a motion for a new trial at the circuit or special term. In the latter instance, an application may also at the same time be made for a new trial, because of the misdirection of the court, or for the reason that the verdict has been rendered either without evidence or against the evidence appearing in the case. Code, § 265; Macy v. Wheeler, 30 N. Y. 231. This court has always possessed that power, and there is nothing in the Code by which it has either been abrogated or abridged. A different view of the law was suggested by the judge who delivered the opinion in Parker v. Jervis, 3 Keyes, 271, but it was not necessary for the decision of the case, and probably was not concurred in by the other members of the court. Smith v. Ætna Ins Co., 49 N. 211, 216. Several years after the order was made, directing the exceptions in this cause to be first heard at the general term, such an application was made to the special term by the present defendants; it was opposed because of that direction, but the objection was overruled by the court, and the application was formally heard and denied. Both parties have appealed from the order which was then made, the plaintiff claiming that the application should not have been heard at all, on account of the direction which was given to the case at the circuit, and the defendants insisting that the verdict should have been set aside and a new trial ordered.

While the unqualified power to hear a motion for a new trial after verdict has been given to the special term, its exercise has not been reserved in a case where a previous direction has been made that the motion shall be heard on the exceptions, in the first instance, at the general term. Snch an order, as well as the provision of the law allowing it to be made, contemplates a different course of proceeding after it has been made, and that is, that the [723]*723motion must be first heard at the general term and the judgment on the case be there pronounced. The provision of the Code, contained in the section already referred to, is mandatory on this subject. And yet, if the special term can entertain and dispose of a motion for a new trial while an order continues in force, sending the exceptions in the first instance to the" general term, the force and effect of that provision can be at once defeated. For, if the verdict can be set aside by the special term, the exceptions cannot be heard at the general term, and judgment cannot be given there, if the case proves to be in such a condition as to require that disposition to be made of it. In that way, the practice devised by the Code for one purpose could be made the means of nullifying its provision for another. That could not have been the design of any part of the system created by it. By giving the court the power to send the case on tjie exceptions, in the first instance, to the general term, it must have been intended, when such a direction should be given, that the entire case, so far as it might involve a review of the trial, would be there considered and disposed of. This necessarily follows from the nature of the direction given, and the disposition to be made upon the hearing of the case, unless a new trial be ordered; then judgment must be ordered upon the verdict. This operates as a restriction on the general power conferred upon the special term to hear and determine motions for a new trial. That allows that practice to be pursued except wnen such an order has been made as was directed in this case, and then the implication is clear that the case must be heard and disposed of by the general term. Beattie v. Niagara Savings Bank, 41 How. 137. The special term, therefore, should have dismissed the application made to it for a new trial, instead of hearing and denying it. Devoe v. Hackley, 3 Robt. 679 ; Morange v. Morris, 20 How. 257, 263.

The only remedy available to the defeated party, where an order the been made, sending the case, in the first instance, to the general term, while that direction remains undisposed of, is to bring on the motion for a new trial before that court. And that, from the nature and terms of the direction, must be heard only upon the exceptions taken during the trial. The right to move in the first instance at the general term is reserved exclusively to a class of cases dependent solely upon the law. For it is only legal points which can be raised and presented by exceptions; and it is the exceptions, and nothing beyond them, which the court is permitted [724]*724to order to be first heard at the general term. They are the subjects which that court is required to hear, and upon their being found to be well taken a new trial must be directed, while if they are unsustained the court must pronounce judgment in favor of the successful party. Code, § 265. Exceptions can be taken only to rulings made by the court during the progress of the trial. They cannot be presented to the conclusions of the jury, and do not bring up the point for consideration, whether or not the verdict has been rendered either without or against the evidence. Upon the hearing of the exceptions, in the first instance, by the general term, that point cannot be brought before the court. Hoxie v. Green, 37 How. 97; Cronk v. Canfield, 31 Barb. 171; Hotchkins v. Hodge, 38 id. 117; Dickerson v. Wason, 48 id. 412 ; Sheaf v. Utica & Black River R. R. Co., 2 N. Y. Sup. 388.

The action was brought to recover damages arising out of the wrongful sale and conveyance of a large amount of real estate, owned by the plaintiff, and disposed of by the present defendants, as his agents. The property sold and conveyed, consisted of nineteen different lots or parcels of land, and an undivided half of two other parcels of land.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Thomp. & Cook 720, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-keyes-nysupct-1874.