22 Barb. 271 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
Judgments having been rendered and perfected in the county court in these cases, the parties affected thereby had a right to bring appeals
In Barlow v. Brew, (1 Verm. Rep. 488,) Hutchinson, J.
Treating these appeals, therefore, as having respect to the character of-the proceedings to be reviewed, which were judgments at common law, they should be considered as substitutes for writs of error, and creating and conferring upon this court a new and distinct jurisdiction. In this view the judgment rendered by this court, of reversal, was the proper and appropriate judgment. The court of appeals has practically taken this view of their power on such questions. In Frees v. Ford, (2 Selden, 176,) they reversed the judgment of this court with costs, on the ground that the county court had no jurisdiction of the cause ; and in the ease of Kundolf v, Thalheimer, (2 Kernan,
T. R. Strong, Welles and Smith, Justices.]