BANK OF GENESEE v. SPENCER
Court of Appeals of the State of New York
September, 1858
18 N.Y. 150
If the accretion was formed under all the other circumstances necessary to constitute it alluvion, I can scarcely suppose that a person could successfully resist the otherwise valid claim of the riparian owner, by alleging his own wrong, by showing that the accretion would not have thus formed if he had not himself wrongfully placed impediments in the stream. But that question is not before us. It is enough that this case does not show that the land in question was alluvion.
The judgment, therefore, must be affirmed with costs.
COMSTOCK and SELDEN, Js. did not take part in the decision; all the other judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.
An order of the Supreme Court, refusing to set aside an execution issued without leave, after five years, is not appealable.
It seems that such an execution is not void, but only voidable, in the discretion of the court from which it issued.
John H. Reynolds, for the appellant.
Joshua L. Brown, for the respondent.
PRATT, J. The order of the Supreme Court, from which this appeal is brought, is clearly not appealable. It neither affects a substantial right, nor is it a final order in a summary application in an action after judgment, within the provisions of the 11th section of the Code.
First. It does not affect a substantial right. 1. If an execution, issued after five years from the time of perfecting judgment without leave of the court, be absolutely void, there is no pressing necessity for setting it aside. It would constitute no defence to an action against the party issuing
Secondly. It is not a final order in a summary application in an action after judgment. If any question of practice can be settled in this court by adjudication, this is one. It was decided in Sherman v. Felt (3 How. Pr. R., 425), that that provision of the Code did not refer to an ordinary motion to set aside proceedings for irregularity, or as a matter of favor, but that it referred to an application assuming the validity of the judgment, and based upon it, which itself might terminate in a final order in the nature of a judgment, such as an application for surplus moneys upon a sale in a foreclosure suit, or for an order of sale for non-payment of installment becoming due subsequent to the judgment. The same construction was given to that section of the Code, in Dunlop v. Edwards (3 Comst., 341), Humphrey v. Chamberlin (1 Kern., 274), and Jones et al. v. Derby (16 N. Y., 242).
These motions, to set aside proceedings for irregularity or as a matter of favor, are left by the Code to the control of the court in which the action is pending. To entertain appeals to this court from orders of that kind would soon overwhelm the court with that kind of business alone. This consideration would of course not justify this court in
The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
DENIO, J. I am of opinion that the execution which the Supreme Court was applied to to set aside was not void but only voidable. There was a judgment which warranted such process, and it had not been paid or released. The practice of the court, now regulated in that particular by statute, forbade the issuing of execution, after the lapse of five years, without an application to the court, or notice and proof that the judgment or a part of it remained unsatisfied. (
There was always a time after which a party who had recovered a judgment was not at liberty to sue out execution without an application to the court. Formerly, the time was a year and a day; and the form of obtaining an award of execution, when one had not been issued in time, was by scire facias quare executionem non. Afterwards it was extended by the
The question, therefore, whether this execution ought to have been set aside, addressed itself to the discretion of the Supreme Court, and it was a matter of practice of the same nature with the mass of questions relating to the regularity of proceedings which daily come before that court. If the motion which was made to set it aside was a summary application after judgment, the decision was not an order affecting a substantial right within the 3d subdivision of
SELDEN and HARRIS, Js., were absent; all the other judges concurring,
Appeal dismissed.
