116 N.Y.S. 977 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from an order made at “ Special Term of the Supreme Court * * * . held at Chambers thereof in the County Court House,’5 setting aside a verdict and granting" a new; trial. The order was made by the trial judge. The action was brought
In accordance therewith, an investigation -of the hooka Was commenced ; but after allowing the defendant to look at \the hooks covering .a couple: of years, the plaintiff refused to allow, any further investigation. Whereupon, an order to show cause was j obtained
So far as the motion papers asked for, and the order appealed from purported to grant, a reargument of the motion made at the close of the case to set aside the verdict and for a new trial upon the grounds stated in section 999 of the Code of Civil Procedure, I do not think that it can be sustained. That motion is based “ upon exceptions, or because the verdict is for excessive or insufficient damages, or otherwise contrary to the evidence, or contrary to law.” It must be made upon the judge’s minutes “at the same term.” If an appeal is taken it must be heard upon a case prepared and settled in the usual manner. The motion was made at the same term, was denied, and an order entered, and the term expired.
The rights of the several parties were then fixed. The right of appeal existed. That motion was based upon the record of the case as presented; and if that record disclosed error it was available and a reversal could be obtained by the ordinary method and practice prescribed. If the record did not contain error, there was no ground for granting the motion in the first place, and no ground could thereafter be supplied to justify a reargument.
We shall, therefore, treat the order as one granting a new trial upon the ground of surprise. This is one of the grounds provided for in section 998 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and it is expressly provided that upon such a motion it is not necessary to make a case. Section 1002 provides that “ in a case not specified in the last three sections, a motion for a new trial must in the first instance be heard and decided at the Special Term.” Reading this section in connection with section 998, it follows that a motion for a new trial upon the ground of surprise must in the first instance be heard and decided at the Special Term.
The order to show cause having been granted by the judge who presided at the trial and made returnable before him at chambers, the parties appeared and submitted their papers and affidavits, and
The power of the Supreme Court over its judgments is inherent, not derived from or Controlled1, by statutory or Code provisions. In Donnelly v. McArdle (14 App. Div. 217), three years and eight months after the entry of the judgment, and after two motions had be.en made and denied for a new trial, the plaintiff,, Upon a new set of papers, obtained aii order to show cause from the trial judge why the case should not be reopened upon the ground of surprise and a new trial had. Hr. Justice O’Brien, Writing the prevailing opinion Upon the appeal to this court, said: “ We all agree that the court had power to grant the motion, and that such power was not dependent upon or limited by the Code, but is inherent in the court. ( Vanderbilt v. Schreyer, 81 N. Y. 646; Ladd v. Stevenson, 112 id. 325.) In the .latter case it was isaid: ‘ The whole power of the court to relieve from judgments taken through “ mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect ” is not limited by section 124, but in the exercise of its control over its own judgments it may open them upon the application of any one for .sufficient reason in the furtherance of justice. Its power to do so does not depend: upon any statute, but is inherent, and. it would be quite unfortunate if it did not possess it to the fullest extent.’ And in; speaking of such power, the court in Vanderbilt v. Schreyer (supra) said; ‘ There aré so many occasions for its exercise that it should not be curtailed. ; Whether the power shall be exercised in any case rests in its discretion, with the exercise of which this cohrt will not .ordinarily interfere.’ ”
■ By Code provisions and rules of court,, the exercise of the general powers conferred upon the Supreme Court is distributed among its justices- out of court, its Trial and Special Term parts, its Appellate Term and its Appellate Division. The orderly .administration of justice requires that the practice as governed by Code and. rules
What appellant did object to upon the hearing was that a case should have been made, and that as no case had been made, the court could not entertain the motion; but, as pointed out, a case is not required upon, the motion for a new trial upon the ground of irregularity or surprise. The making of a case under such circumstances would be an idle formality. The motion is not based on rulings at the trial and the admission and exclusion of evidence. The court directed a verdict because there was no evidence to the contrary; and the reason there was no evidence was because of the unexpected absence of a.material witness by whom the only evidence could have been given. The non-appearance of an expected witness furnishes good reason for the granting of a new trial on the ground of surprise. (Tilden v. Gardinier, 25 Wend. 663; Cahill v. Hilton, 31 Hun, 114; affd., 96 N. Y. 675; Smith v. Lidgerwood Mfg. Co., 60 App. Div. 467.)
Under the circumstances presented by this record, the order appealed from should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Laughlin and Scott, JJ., concurred; Ingraham and Houghton, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
This action was an action at law and came on for trial at the Trial Term which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. .The defendant'
The motion made before the learned justice at his chambers was thus a motion to reargue a motion which had been made and decided at the Trial Term, which Trial Term had adjourned. The order to show cause was returnable before the trial justice at his chambers, and not at the regular Special Term of the court for the hearing of litigated motions, and was heard by him, not as an original motion at Special Term, but as an application made to him to rehear a motion made to and decided by the Trial Term at which he had presided and which had adjourned. This motion which the Trial Term of the court had heard and decided and which could be reviewed on appeal, and which the learned justice
Thus the question as to whether the defendant was entitled to a new trial, either for an error of the judge in refusing to postpone the trial, or upon the ground of the ábsence of a material witness, could be directly presented upon the appeal from the judgment, or on an appeal from the order denying the motion for a new trial on the minutes. The.surprise for .which a party can move for a new trial at the Special Term certainly is not a surprise because of a fact of which a party at the trial had full knowledge, and where the facts in relation thereto were called to the attention of the court at the trial, and a ruling made which could be reviewed on appeal. Careful provision is made in the Code for preserving the rights of the parties to an action by enabling a defeated party to review a
I think, therefore, that the. order appealed from should be reversed,'with ten dollars costs and disbursements,
Houghton, J., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.