Tripp v. Cook

26 Wend. 143
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 26 Wend. 143 (Tripp v. Cook) 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
Tripp v. Cook, 26 Wend. 143 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1841).

Opinion

On the case coming up for decision, Mr. Justice Cowen observed that, inasmuch as Tripp had suffered the bill to be taken against him as* confessed, he must be considered as having suffered a default, and therefore not entitled to prosecute an appeal within the decision of this court, in Rowley v. Van Benthuysen, 16 Wendell 369. Besides the application made by him was addressed to the mere discretion of the Chancellor, and he having seen fit under all the circumstances of the case to deny the application, it was not a proper case for review, as is also fully shown in the opinion delivered in Rowley v. Van Benthuysen. He deemed this a mere question of practice. The defendant complained that the plaintiff had proceeded in the prosecution of the suit, after having lulled him into security, and had gained an undue advantage from which he asked relief. How can this be distinguished in that point of view, from a motion to open a default unduly obtained. He therefore moved that the appeal be dismissed.

Senator Veb.planck said, that he could not consider this as a mere question of practice. He deemed it a question [151]*151at an inadequate price, from whatever cause, is subject of pure judicial discretion in the court of chancery, and so completely within its absolute control as not to be subject to appeal. The case of Rowley v. Van Benthuysen, 16 Wendell, 190, and another case more recently decided, but not reported, are relied upon as establishing the rule in this court. Both those cases, decided that this court would not entertain an appeal from an order of the Chancellor refusing to vacate an order that a bill should be taken pro confesso, and to grant a party leave to put in an answer. The principle established by them is, that the appellate court will not undertake to regulate the practice of the courts below, or to entertain appeals on decisions, merely regulating their modes of proceeding, and within the judicial discretion of the courts, not to be resolved into any general, legal, or equitable principles, nor passing upon the merits of the controversy. The soundness of the decisions cannot be questioned, nor do I desire to restrict them to mere openings of defaults; but the principle does not reach cases like this under review. It refers strictly to the practice of the courts and to questions of pure and unmixed judicial discretion. It is not always easy to distinguish involving a great and important principle; and, although the application made by the appellant was addressed to the discretion of the Chancellor, still it was of a character which might and should be reviewed. The decision of the Chancellor granting a re-sale, although resting in discretion, was reviewed here in Collier v. Whipple, 13 Wendell, 224, and he perceived no reason why a decision, refusing a re-sale was not equally the subject of review. (He said he had reduced his opinion to writing, but had it not then in court, but would give it to the reporter for publication. The following opinion was subsequently delivered to the reporter:) A preliminary difficulty has been presented to the decision of this case on the merits. It is maintained that the granting, or not granting relief, by a re-sale or otherwise, to persons injured by sales under foreclosure, [152]*152theoretically between matters of practice in chancery, which are subject to such discretion, and those which dispose of the rights of the party and may be decided upon broad principles of lasting and general application. But this court would violate its constitutional duty if it refused to hear appeals of the latter class, only because they were presented by orders or decisions upon the course of proceedings. The cases decided here, and now confidently appealed to, were simply exercises of the judicial discretion of this court as to its own appellate powers; for the authority given us by statute would authorize us to “ reverse, affirm or alter any order ” brought up on appeal. But we have felt the utter impossibility of reviewing the mass of orders relating to the practice and proceedings of the court; we saw that the entertaining such appeals would be oppressive and injurious, if it were possible, and we have adopted the rule so strongly urged by Chief Justice Kent, on a similar occasion, that “ a reasonable confidence must always be entertained that a court will exercise its discretion soundly.”

But although injunctions, and decisions touching them, fall within the literal definition of practice and proceedings in equity, are governed by judicial discretion, and are often not final, no one has ever contended that these were not subject to review, though such cases swell our calendar every term. The present case is, I think, as little within the decision of Rowley v. Van Benthuysen.

Judicial discretion is a phrase of great latitude; but it never means the arbitrary will of the judge. It is always (as Chief Justice Marshall defined it,) “ a legal discretion to be exercised in discerning the course prescribed by law; when that is discerned it is the duty of courts to follow it. It is to be exercised, not to give effect to the will of the the judge, but to that of the law.” Such a discretion may be exercised in relation to the convenience of courts and suitors and the expedition of business, or upon the evidence as to some interlocutory matter, on which one tribu[153]*153nal could not well prescribe to, or even advise another. It may also be exercised in deciding on the application of one or other of two conflicting rules, according to special circumstances, or else in cases of doubt where the decision is not governed by the absolute certainty of law, but rests upon the probabilities of evidence. It is in this last sense that the granting of new trials in cases of verdicts against evidence or excessiveness of damages, in common law courts, is said to be in their “judicial discretion,” which is yet clearly a discretion to be exercised according to law and subject to review. 1 Burrows’ R. 391, and 1 Lev. p. 97, there cited. I do not pretend to draw the precise line of distinction between these gradually assimilating degrees of legal discretion. But it is enough to say that it is the former species only which is of necessity confined to the breast of the court exercising it, exempt from any superintending examination. Judge Sutherland has given a definition of that discretion which is not subject to appeal, which has been adopted and argued from in the cases cited: “ It is that discretion which cannot be governed by any fixed principles or rules.” This does not apply here. The rules and principles of relief, when property has been sacrificed at mortgage sales through fraud or error, have been settled in various adjudications by several chancellors, especially Eldon and Kent. They have refused to relieve for simple inadequacy of price] they have granted relief upon loss from fraud, from fraudulent negligence or other misconduct of a third person, and even from “ a surprise.” I could not desire any more decisive evidence that such cases involve “ fixed principles of equity,” than is furnished by the luminous and conclusive opinion of Chief Justice Nelson, in Collier v. Whipple, 13 Wendell 224, where he lucidly summed up the learning of this branch of equity jurisprudence, and deduced from the decisions an equitable application of their principles to an entirely new case.

So far as this preliminary question is governed by authority, it must be settled by our decision in the case of [154]*154Collier v.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Wend. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tripp-v-cook-nysupct-1841.