14 Abb. Pr. 86 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1861
No case was made by the defendants for the purpose of reviewing the trial before the ref
Since the enactment authorizing and regulating the reference of claims against the estate of deceased persons, the judicial system has been changed and a new code of practice adopted, much more complicated and intricate in its machinery and workings than the former, and it is not easy, in all cases, to adapt the new system and forms of procedure to the remedies secured by special statutes.
Under the former practice, less technical than the present, the process for a review of the trial and the correction of the errors of the referee in cases like the present, was quite simple. The statute provides that the court may set aside the report of the referees or appoint others in their place, and may confirm such report and adjudge costs, as in actions against executors. (2 Rev. Stat., supra.) The order to confirm the report, and for judgment, was an order of course and nisi, and only became absolute after the quarto die post; and judgment was entered upon it in the same manner and with the like effect as upon the verdict of a jury. (Burhans a. Burhans, 10 Wend., 601; Woodin a. Bagley, 13 Ib., 453.
Under the Code, common orders are abolished, and if an order of confirmation and for judgment upon the report is necessary, it must be made at special term upon a special application. (Code, §§ 278, 401.)
The Code gives an appeal from the judgment as the only method of reviewing a trial, except in the very few cases specially provided for, in which a motion for a new trial may be made. As this proceeding is not a civil action within the Code, it is not within the provisions of that act, and the form of procedure must be regulated by analogy to its provisions rather than by the terms of the act.
But it is not necessary for us to settle the practice. It is enough that the judgment given at special term was unauthorized by law. A judgment under the statute, when given, must be upon the-report of the referee confirmed by the court, not by the court notwithstanding or against the report of the referee. (2 Rev. Stat., supra.) The court may only set aside the report of the referees or appoint other referees in their stead, if the report is erroneous or unsatisfactory, or it may confirm the report, and in that case adjudge costs as in actions against executors. If the report is set aside, a new trial before the same or other referees follows of course. The report being set aside, there is nothing upon which to base a judgment for costs. It is a statutory proceeding, and the only authority for a judgment is the report of the referee, which is subject to examination by the court; but the court cannot, upon setting aside the report, virtually displace the referee by itself pronouncing the judgment which the referee should have given. The judgment is not simply irregular, but erroneous, and must be reversed with costs; and as the practice is unsettled, the proceedings are remitted to the special term, to the end that either party may apply for such relief as they may be advised they are entitled to.
Held, by the Court,
The court affirmed the special-term order, with $10 costs, and gave the defendants leave to file exceptions to the report of the referee, nunc pro tunc, and time to make a case and exceptions.
And see Boyd a. Bigelow, 14 How. Pr., 511.
The question whether this proceeding is an action or not has been mooted, in reference to the right to costs. In Lansing a. Cole (Code R., 246), and Munson a. Howell (12 Abbotts’ Pr., 77), it was held that it is an action within 2 Rev. Stat., 89, § 41. The contrary was held in Van Stickler a. Graham (7 How. Pr., 208), and Avery a. Smith (9 Ib., 349), but the result of these latter cases was disapproved in Linn a. Clow (14 Ib., 508).
As to the tests by which it is to be distinguished from an arbitration, see Akely a. Akely, 17 How. Pr., 21.
Consult, also, Tracy a. Suydam, 30 Barb., 110.
Present, Balcom, Campbell, Parker, and Mason, JJ.