Zirinsky v. Zlotnick
This text of 158 N.Y.S. 254 (Zirinsky v. Zlotnick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is a motion to dismiss an appeal from an order of the Municipal Court for alleged failure to cause the return to be filed. One of the reasons stated for the delay is that the clerk of the Municipal Court “informed deponent’s clerk that before he will accept the papers on appeal prepared by this office deponent would have to procure a stipulation from the other side stipulating to the correctness of the record.”
If true, this action by the clerk evidently arises from a misconstruction of rule 4 of the rules of this court regarding the making up of returns from the Municipal Court. That rule, properly construed, means that upon appeals from judgments, where a case is prepared to be submitted for settlement to the trial justice, there must be a certificate of the clerk; but if the parties or their attorneys stipulate that the case contains all the evidence, etc., the clerk may [255]*255certify the correctness of the case upon such stipulation, thus saving the work of comparing the proposed return with the papers on file in his office. The same method applies to appeals from orders which require no case to be made for settlement, but are heard upon the papers used on the hearing of the motion. The clerk must compare the papers offered for certification with those on file in his office and certify as to their correctness, unless the parties or their attorneys stipulate that the papers composing the proposed return arc correct copies of those on file and used upon the hearing of the motion, in which event the clerk may certify to their correctness without making a comparison.
If, however, on either an appeal from a judgment or order, no stipulation is made, the clerk must then compare and certify the papers. He can in no event refuse their proper certification, upon which this court must alone depend for the correctness of the record.
Motion to dismiss appeal denied.
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158 N.Y.S. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zirinsky-v-zlotnick-nyappterm-1916.