Van Slyke v. Disbrow

117 N.Y.S. 620
CourtNew York County Court, Otsego County
DecidedMay 14, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 117 N.Y.S. 620 (Van Slyke v. Disbrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Court, Otsego County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Slyke v. Disbrow, 117 N.Y.S. 620 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

KELLOGG, J.

This is a motion made by the respondents for an order setting aside the return of the justice of the peace heretofore made herein, and filed in Otsego county clerk’s office on the 23d day of July, 1908. This action was commenced before Clarence D. Sewell, as one of the justices of the peace of the town of Oneonta, on the 7th day of March, 1907. Thereafter, and on the 15th day of the same month, issue was duly joined. It appears that at the time of the joinder of issue the plaintiff requested that a commission might issue, and in relation to this commission a question has arisen between the respective parties as to what objections, if any, were taken in relation to the issuance of a commission, and as to when such objections were taken. The action was then adjourned until the 10th day of June, 1907, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon of that day, at which time the commission, with the interrogatories and cross-interrogatories thereto had been returned, and when the plaintiffs offered the commission in evidence there is also a dispute between the respective parties as to what objections, if any, were interposed by the defendants in relation to the reading of the said commission in evidence and as to when any such objection or objections were taken. On the 17th day of July, 1907, the, justice rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the [622]*622defendants in the action for the sum- of $20.80 damages, and $5.35' costs, aniounting in all to the sum of $26.15, and from that judgment the defendants have taken an appeal to this court.

No return whatsoever was filed in the clerk’s office until the 23d day of July, 1908, more than a year after the entry of the judgment in the case by the justice, although section 3053 of the Code of' Civil Procedure requires that after 10 and within 30 days from the service of a notice of appeal, and a payment of the costs and fee, as prescribed in section 3047, a return must be made to the Appellate Court, with a_ notice of appeal, and the undertaking, if any has been delivered to him or to his clerk, and the same filed with the clerk of the appellate court. Upon the 22d day of July, 1908, a copy of the justice’s return, as made, was served upon the respondents’ attorney. Soon thereafter, and on the 30th day of July, 1908, the appeal came on for argument, and upon such argument before the then county judge the respondents’ attorney, it appears, claims to have been surprised in regard to certain-objections which had been included in the return of the justice, and appearing therein as having been made by the defendants’ attornéy, to the issuance of the commission, and to the receipt of the commission in evidence, and stating that he had then observed the same for the first time. Later on it appears the court was requested to suspend its decision on the merits of the appeal, until the respondents were given an opportunity to make a motion for an amended return. This course appears to have been permitted, as' a motion was made for an amended return, which was argued at the September term of the County Court. Proposed interrogatories were submitted on that motion by the attorney for the respondents, directed to the justice, as to whether said objections were made on the trial by the defendants’ attorney. The learned county judge, in deciding that motion, says:

“That when- the justice has fully answered In his original return, as in this case, all questions proposed to be submitted to him by the order, he does not believe that this court can properly grant an order, and that, if the justice should answer the proposed questions in the negative, there would be two returns contradictory to each other. That the first return must be regarded as true, which would be equivalent to holding that the justice cannot be asked to answer questions already answered, where any change must controvert his original return.”

The county judge also intimates that the proper motion for the respondents to have made was that the return of the justice be set aside. This motion was made in October last to set aside the justice’s return, in that the objections set put in the return of the justice were not actually made in behalf of the defendants on the trial of the action, but that they were subsequently written and handed to the justice before whom the trial was had.

After a careful examination of the facts as presented on this motion, I am not prepared to hold that, if the respondents are entitled to relief, the same could be wholly granted by an order directing an amended return. I am of the opinion that such an order, in part, at least,.might cause the production of an amended return in direct conflict with the return as filed, and which has been used on this motion. An appellate court may not be required, however, to make a rule as [623]*623to what proceedings should be included in a justice’s return upon the presentation of conflicting affidavits in relation thereto; but there are certain facts relating to his return which appear in the several affidavits used on this motion which are uncontradicted. The justice before whom the action was tried says:

“That, at the time plaintiffs’ attorney applied for a commission, no objection was made on the ground that the plaintiff had filed no affidavit as required by the Code of Civil Procedure, and that the only objection made to reading in evidence the testimony of one of the plaintiffs, Van Slyke, from the commission, was that it appeared from said commission that Frank O. Warner, the commissioner, was a notary of Rensselaer county, and not of Albany.”

He also states:

“That the defendants’ attorney stated in open court, and in the presence of the plaintiffs’ attorney, that he, the defendants’ attorney, proposed to object to every step taken by the plaintiffs that was not legal, and that upon the application of the plaintiffs for a commission that the defendants’ attorney objected to the issuance of the same, and stated in open court, in substance, that he would reduce his objections to writing, and file them with deponent, said justice.”

He further states that on the adjourned day of the action, and also upon the return of the commission, the defendants’ attorney made the following objection to the same being read in evidence:

“ ‘That it appears from the said commission that the notary before whom the commission was taken was commissioned for the county of Rensselaer, and not the county of Albany, where the evidence was taken.’ That he, the said justice, reserved his decision upon the admission of said commission in evidence, and did not pass upon its admissibility at the time it was offered. That the defendants’ attorney then stated that he would file written objections to the reading of the commission in evidence, which objections were before me, said justice, before the rendition of said judgment, and the same are included in the return hereto. That the said return, so filed, is a correct return of all the proceedings, papers, records, and evidence in the case, so far as this deponent is able to prepare the same, except as to how and when objections were made.”

In the justice’s return, as filed, notwithstanding the foregoing statements made by the justice in his affidavit as presented on this motion, the following objections appear in the return as having been made by the defendants’ attorney to the issuing of the commission, at the time of the application therefor:

“First.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 N.Y.S. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-slyke-v-disbrow-nyotsegoctyct-1909.