119 N.Y. 404 | NY | 1890
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *407 This action is brought by the plaintiff as assignee of a residuary legatee and devisee of Augustus Chapman, deceased, against the defendant Richard B. Chapman, as the sole surviving executor and trustee under the will, to set aside certain conveyances of real property belonging to the estate, alleged in the complaint to have been fraudulent, and for an accounting of the profits and use of the estate moneys, and for other purposes, the action being very broad in its general scope and purpose.
After issue joined, the case was referred and partially tried. During the trial the defendant became seriously ill, and it is alleged and seems to be conceded by both parties that there is no hope of examining him further as a witness. But the general account-books and bank pass-book in which the defendant kept the accounts relating to the estate of which he was the executor seems to have been produced upon the trial, and an examination of their contents made on the part of the plaintiff. *408
After the illness of the defendant, the plaintiff made an application at Special Term to compel the defendant to produce and discover to the plaintiff certain of his individual and private books of account, demanding that the court order them to be delivered to a referee with the right to the plaintiff to inspect the same and take copies thereof. On the part of the defendant, affidavits were read at the Special Term whereby it was attempted to show that the discovery was unreasonable or unnecessary. After hearing the parties the Special Term denied the application and, the order having been affirmed by the General Term, the plaintiff appeals to this court.
Whether the application ought to have been granted rested in the sound discretion of the court at Special Term. The General Term had power to review the exercise of that discretion, and to reverse the order if it was of the opinion that the merits of the motion were of such a character as to require the granting of the application.
We think that the controversy must end with the decision of the General Term. The granting or withholding of the order for discovery was a matter of practice, subject to the discretion of the Supreme Court, and this court has no power to review such an order. (Code, § 190; Clyde v. Rogers,
The appeal should be dismissed, with costs.
All concur.
Appeal dismissed.