67 N.C. 453 | N.C. | 1872
The plaintiff sought to charge the defendant with two notes, which he alleged belonged to the estate of his intestate, and which defendant had failed to collect and lost through negligence. It was referred to a referee to report upon the facts relating to the notes ; he reported that they did not belong to the estate of the intestate, and that the defendant had not been negligent in respect thereto. The. plaintiff excepted to the report, and his Honor sustained the exceptions, thereby holding that the defendant is chargeable. Rut his Honor finds no facts, and therefore does not separate his con elusions of law from the facts found, as he is required to do by O. O. P., secs. 241-’2.
The jurisdiction which is given to this Court by the Coustition is appellate, upon any matter of law or legal inference. It says, that no issues of fact shall be'tricd before it. Art. IT, sec. 10. In Heilig v. Stokes, 63 N. C., 612, this Corirt held that the phrase “ issues of fact,” was a technical one, and must he understood in its legal, technical sense, as including only
This Court, however, has several times said that it WGuldnot try any such question of fact, except it had been found in one or another way by the Judge below; and upon appeal. Clegg vs. N. Y. White Soapstone Co., 66 N. C., 391. The reason is obvious; the jurisdiction of this Court is appellate, and can be exercised only after a finding below.
This Court has a plain and undoubted. power to review the decision of a Judge of a Superior Court, on any matter of law or legal inference. But this power cannot be exercised unless the facts found, and the conclusions of law thereon are separately stated. It is impossible to review a mixed conclusion of fact and law ; because, whether the law is right or wrong, depends entirely on the facts to which it is applied.
Nor, as was said in Clegg v. N. Y. Soapstone Co., is it allowable to .assume that the Judge found such facts as would sup
The judgment below is reversed, and the case remanded, in order that his Honor may state separately the iacts relating to the subject of the exceptions, and his conclusions oí law thereon, and that the case may be further proceeded in according to law.
The defendant will recover costs in this Court.
Let this opinion be certified.
Pee Cueiam. Judgment reversed.