Robert v. Trader's Insurance

17 Wend. 631
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 17 Wend. 631 (Robert v. Trader's 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.

Bluebook
Robert v. Trader's Insurance, 17 Wend. 631 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1836).

Opinion

The following opinion was delivered:

By Senator Edwards. Both parties have submitted to the correctness of the judgment of affirmance of the supreme court, and as neither of them has brought a writ of error upon that judgment, it can not now be reviewed by this court. We are to consider it what the records of the supreme court showed it to be, a valid judgment in the name of Thomas Robert against the Traders’ Insurance Company, before it was vacated by the order of the supreme court. Was then the judgment of the supreme court in [634] granting the order at the special term correct?

It is contended that the supreme court had no jurisdiction over the cause, except for the purpose of reviewing the judgment of the superior court upon the case presented by the writ of error to that court. This position, I think, can not be maintained. For every purpose of the jurisdiction of the appellate court, the record itself is supposed to be removed, although, in point of fact, only a transcript is sent up (Graham's Pr. 786). When a writ of error and transcript of the record is returned to the supreme court,the plaintiff may move to amend, or the defendant, to quash the writ, or non pros the plaintiff (1 Caines, 251). The supreme court, in such a case, may even award a venire when it becomes necessary (Arnold and others v. Sanford and others, 14 Johns. R. 417). And on the rendition of the judgment the execution issues from that court. After the return of the writ of error and the transcript of the record, the court have jurisdiction over the cause for all purposes in the same manner as the subordinate tribunal had jurisdiction. Having rendered the judgment they have the control over it—and having a right to issue the execution, they have a right to stay it on a proper application.

But it is said by the counsel, if the supreme court liad gained jurisdiction of the cause for other purposes than for review, after the judgment of affirmance was rendered by that court, one of the justices had not the power at a special term to stay the proceedings and vacate the judgment. By the act passed in 1830 (Sess. Laws, 208), the justices of the supreme court, some, or one of them were directed to sit in vacation for the purpose of hearing [356]*356and deciding all such non enumerated business as should arise in that court; except such as they directed should be heard in term time. Was this mo tion, then, non-enumerated business? If it was, one of the justices was required to hear it at a special term. In my opinion, it was non-enumerated business. An enumerated motion involves an inquiry into the merits.of the pause (1 Dunlap's Pr. 324; Remsen v. Isaacs, 1 Caines, 22). Did the [635] relief here sought by the party, involve an inquiry into the merits of the cause? what was it? The company sought to be relieved from the operation of a judgment obtained against them in consequence of the payment of a mortgage to Bolton by the means of Robert. When was this payment made? It was made after the judgment in the superior court, while the writ of error was pending in the supreme court, and before the judgment of that court was rendered; but this fact was not known to the company until fifteen days after the rendition of the judgment. It was a fact, therefore, that could not have been interposed to defeat the recovery; it did not exist until after the recovery, and could not, therefore, have gone to the merits of the cause. It is not now insisted upon as a defence to the action, or to show that no judgment ought to have been recovered; but it is'insisted upon to show, that though a regular judgment has been recovered, it ought not to be collected. It is insisted upon, therefore, by way of satisfaction of the judgment in the nature of a payment. It is a motion for summary relief against a judgment: the remedy by motion being now adopted as a substitute for the ancient writ of audita querela, which has become obsolete (Suter v. Mundell, 1 Bos. & Pul. 429; Wardell v. Eden, 2 Johns. Cas. 261; 2 Sclw. Pr. 252). It was a motion, therefore, to perform the office of that writ, which is a remedial writ invented to prevent a defect of justice where a party had a good defence, but by the ordinary forms of law had no opportunity of making it, and is to afford relief after judgment rendered. As it did not involve an inquiry, therefore, into the merits of the case, it was not of the nature of an enumerated motion.. Besides, what had the legislature in view as non enumerated business of the supreme court, when the act was passed requiring one of the justices of that court to hold special terms ? The legislature had reference to the practice of that court as it then existed. By the rules of the court, certain motions had been denominated enumerated, and others non-enumerated motions, and the classification of these motions was the same, when the act was passed, as those now comprised within the [636] forty-seventh rule of that.court. The legislature then must have intended any motion arising in that court, then not already classified and denominated as enumerated; and as this motion most clearly is not one of those thus classified, and as it can not be thus classified, inasmuch as it does not involve an inquiry into the merits of the cause, it must be such a motion as the legislature intended to embrace within the act to which I have alluded as non enumerated, and such therefore as they intended should be heard at the special terms.

The next question is, where the facts submitted to the chief justice sufficient to justify him in ordering a vacatur of the judgment ? With a view of arriving at a satisfactory conclusion on this point, let us inquire, who were the original parties in interest, what were-their rights,- and how far were they affected by the assignment of the policies and the subsequent payment of the mortgage executed by Robert to Bolton. Who were the original parties in interest ? The chief justice appears to have taken it for granted, that the case authorized him to conclude, that though the policies were taken in the name of Robert, yet they were only nominally so,and that they were taken to secure Bolton’s interest; and that therefore Bolton was the principal; for he says, “ The simple state of the case is this; Mr. Bolton lent $5500 and took two securities, a mortgage and an insurance upon his interest as mort[357]*357gagee.” Again he says, “ The mortgage and the policies were separate securities for the same sum of money.” From the closest examination I have been able to give this case, I can not arrive at any such conclusion. It is true the case shows that Bolton took two securities, but what were they? The one was a mortgage, and the other three assignments of the three policies. Of whom did he take them? Of Thomas Robert. Instead, then, of taking a mortgage and an insurance upon his interest as mortgagee from the company, he took a mortgage and the assignments of the policies, as collateral security from Robert, and the mortgage and the assignments, as between Robert and Bolton, were separate securities for the same debt. The case nowhere shows that the company gave the policies for the purpose of being assigned to Bolton, or that they were ever intended to be given as collateral [637] security for the payment of Bolton’s mortgage; and the objects of the insurance, as stated in the policies, forbid any such conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Wend. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-v-traders-insurance-nysupct-1836.