17 How. Pr. 507 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858
¡None of the cases referred to by either of the counsel, or by the justice at special term, reach the present case, which is one where everything had been done, by all concerned in or connected with the case, which could properly be done, except the act of drawing np and signing the report by the referee. The trial had been regularly gone through with, the parties had been fully heard by their counsel, the referee had taken the case and held it under consideration as long as he desired to hold it, had deliberately come to a conclusion, written an opinion and announced his decision to the parties. All that remained to be done by any one, so far as the power, or duty of the referee was concerned, was to have a formal report drawn np in accordance with such decision, and that the same be subscribed by the referee.
The material distinction between the cases referred to and the present is, that in neither of the former had the referee decided the cause, and in each of them the whole case was in his hands and under his control, and in this the referee had fully decided the cause, and announced his decision to the parties. In neither of them, nor in the present case, had the referee made a report in writing of his decision. The ques
Upon the whole, I feel constrained to the conclusion that, until the referee has signed his report, and the same is in readiness for delivery, the case is under the control of the referee, and he may reconsider his decision and change it, or may withhold his report for the purpose of receiving further evidence. Until he signs the report, it cannot be said that he has decided the case in a legal sense. Signing the report, together with notice of the fact to the party entitled to it, are the definitive acts which close his judicial authority in the case—or, rather, they are the acts which preclude his opening the case for further evidence or consideration. If anything short of these is to have that effect, there is no way of drawing a boundary line for the exercise of his discretion or judicial power.
A referee may hear the evidence and argument of counsel, and make up his mind, upon mature deliberation, upon the questions referred, and may, nevertheless, upon further examination, discover that he was in an error. In such a case, I think, there can be no doubt of his power to change his mind and report accordingly. Or, if, for any reason, he supposes either party is able to supply a defect in the evidence so as to change the result, he may, without any change of mind on his part, give the party an opportunity of supplying such defect, and I cannot believe that the fact of disclosing to the parties the state of his deliberations, without manifesting the same in the only way which the law contemplates, should have the effect to preclude him from any reconsideration, upon sufficient grounds appearing therefor.
The controling circumstance is, that the case remains in his
I am aware that this is allowing the referee a large discretion, which should be exercised with great circumspection, but, nevertheless, I think the discretion exists. In case of its abuse, the court has the full power to apply the corrective, by setting aside the report when made.
For the foregoing, reasons, I am of the opinion that the order appealed from should be affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.