11 N.Y.S. 167 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
This action was tried at special term, and judgment ren'dered dismissing the complaint. From such judgment an appeal was taken to the general term, which affirmed the judgment. An appeal- was then ■taken to the court of appeals, which affirmed the judgments of the general and special terms. ° In accordance with the usual practice, a remittitur from the court of appeals was sent down, and judgment was entered upon it, making the judgment of the court of appeals the judgment of this court. A motion is now made for an order vacating such last-named judgment, and directing the clerk to send such remittitur to the clerk of the court of appeals, in ■order'that counsel for plaintiff may be enabled to make a motion before the ■court of appeals for a reargument. An application similar to the present one was made to the general term of the superior court in the case of Selden v. Vermilya, 3 Sandf. 683, and the question as to the power and duty of the inferior coyit upon such an application was thoroughly considered by Judge Dubr, who, speaking for the court, held that the superior court had no authority to grant such an application without the express assent or direction of the appellate court, authenticated by its certified rule or order. This decision was regarded as controlling in the case of Bogardus v. Manufacturing Co., 1 Duer, 592; and the case of Jarais v. Shaw, 16 Abb. Pr. 415, which cases came before the special term of the superior court. The same case is also referred to with approval by Judge Ingraham, who delivered the opinion of the general term of this court in Griswold v. Havens, 16 Abb. Pr. 413. It is claimed, however, by counsel for the plaintiff that these cases must be considered as overruled by Wilmerdings v. Fowler, 15 Abb. Pr. (N. S.) 86; but that case was apeeuliar one, and it is doubtful whether it should be regarded as overruling the cases above cited. An attorney had been charged with misappropriation of money, and the decision had gone against him in the courts below and in the court of appeals. Thereupon he applied to the court of appeals for a reargument, and it was objected that the application was too late, as the remittitur had been sent to tile court below. The matter appears bo have been taken under advisement, and the chief justice subsequently delivered an opinion, which covers several pages, which was "to the effect that the previous decisions of the court of appeals, affirming the orders which had been made in the courts below, were erroneous, and that there ought to be a reargument. At the conclusion of his opinion, however, he stated that the objection that the remittitur having been sent to the court below, the court •of appeals had lost jurisdiction of the case, was well taken, and that the motion must be denied for that reason. He closed his opinion with the following observation: “I see no way to avoid this objection unless the court below should see fit to vacate the filing of the order, in which case, perhaps, we might regard it as though the act had never been done, but the propriety of such a course is entirely discretionary with that court.” Thereupon the motion was denied, but without prejudice, and without costs. Subsequently, the defendant applied to the court below at special term, upon an affidavit and a copy of said opinion, and the court, after hearing counsel for both parties, ordered that the filing of the remittitur and the order of the supreme court making the same the order of that court be vacated, and that the clerk return the remittitur to the court of appeals for its further action. This having been done, a second motion for a reargument was made to the court of appeals and granted, and the orders of the courts below were reversed.
It is to be observed that while the assent or direction of the appellate court to the return of the remittitur was not authenticated by "any rule or order, such assent was authenticated by an opinion delivered by the chief judge of that court, which was presented to the special term of the supreme court when application was made to have the order entered upon the remittitur vacated, and the remittitur itself returned to the court of appeals; and I have ao doubt that if, in any case, the court of appeals should, in any manner, in
In the present case, so far as I can discover from the moving papers, the only grounds upon which the application is made are: (1) That a majority of the judges of the court of appeals did not unite in a single opinion; that while the opinion written by Judge Finch, who wrote for affirmance, was concurred in by Chief Judge Huger, and Judge Andrews, Judge Gray', who also wrote for affirmance, delivered an opinion placing his vote upon a different ground from that taken in the opinion written by Judge Finch; and (2) that Judge Gray was not present duiing the whole of the oral argument before the court. The grounds, therefore, upon which the attorney proposes to move for a reargument, are not among those mentioned in Mount v. Mitchell, supra, and as the court of appeals has repeatedly declared that motions for reargument will not be entertained unless brought within that case, it is impossible to escape the conclusion that the motion for a reargument in this case will not be granted. It is also to be observed that this case evidently received the most careful and thorough consideration in the court of appeals. The case was held under consideration for several months, and three opinions were delivered, and those opinions plainly show that the different views en