The respondent is a judge of the City‘Court of the city of Mew York. The object of the application is to compel him to enter an order on his decision denying an application made by petitioners as plaintiffs in an action then pending in said court for an adjournment of the trial. The petitioners desire that an order may be entered so that they may appeal therefrom and review, in accordance with the recent ruling in Warth v. Moore Blind Stitcher & Overseamer Co. (125 App. Div. 211), the action of the court in denying their motion.
There may be, and doubtless are, cases in which the right of a party to move at Special Term to open his default after inquest or judgment, following the denial of a formal motion to postpone for cause, would not afford him an adequate remedy in case the court erred in denying his motion. It is, therefore, manifest that a party should have the right to have a formal order entered on the decision of his motion, from which he may appeal and apply for a stay pending the appeal if necessary.' We would not say that a party must see that an order is entered and appeal in such cases, or be debarred from obtaining any relief at Special Term on the facts presented to the trial court on his application for a postponement. Motions for postponement are more or less informal, the practice differing in different parts of the State. In some instances the rules and practice of the court require formal affidavits, and in others oral statements of counsel are received. Where calendars are congested such motions arc usually required to be submitted without argument. Often facts are thus presented to the court by affidavits in opposition to the motion, to which the moving party has no opportunity of replying. It would not be safe, therefore, to lay down the rule that such applications must always be so formally
We are of opinion, therefore, that excepting in extreme cases, as indicated, it is better that the practice heretofore existing be adhered to and that inquest be allowed to be taken where the court denies the motion to postpone, leaving fhe party making default to his remedy by motion at Special Term where the whole matter may be disposed of by one motion, and there is greater authority and discretion in imposing terms. It is not for the party making the motion to postpone to dictate to the court the precise day and hour when his motion shall be heard and decided. His right to have an order entered does not accrue until the court has finally considered and denied his motion and decided to proceed with the trial or allow a dismissal or an inquest by default. If a motion be made before the cause is in a position to be moved for trial, the court may hold the motion and reserve decision until the cause is reached for trial, unless the rules of the court provide otherwise. An absent witness, for instance, if that should be the ground for postponement, might return before the cause would be reached for trial. When, however, the decision of the court on the motion becomes final and the court, without intending to further consider the application, denies the motion without reserve, under circumstances indicating that it is reasonably probable that the cause will be tried or an inquest will be taken therein, then the party should have the benefit of the entry of an order from which he may appeal.
The petitioners were plaintiffs in the action in the City Court. The cause was at issue and called on the 15th day of April, 1908.
Counsel for petitioners bases his right to an entry of the order as of April sixteenth on rule XVII of the rules adopted by the City Court which, so far as material, provides as follows:
“ In causes appearing upon the day calendars in Trial Parts 1,2, 3 and 5 for the first time, reasonable adjournments will be granted to prepare for trial. All causes set down for a day certain will appear on the calendar for that day. On the second appearance of a cause, whether at the same or a subsequent term, it must be disposed of when reached, or go to the foot of the general calendar, unless for legal cause shown by affidavit an adjournment is granted. The four causes at the head of each of the day calendars in Parts 1, 2, 3 and 5 will be called for trial, and the remaining causes thereon which are answered ready, passed for the day.”
The minutes of the stenographer show that,the motion was denied on the sixteenth of April, but respondent in his affidavit states that his action on that day was not a final disposition of the motion under this rule, and that the construction placed upon the rule by him and his associates is that such a motion cannot be finally disposed of until the cause becomes one of the first four and may be moved for trial. There can be no doubt but that the judges of the City Court might have clearly framed a rule to that effect, and if they had done so the plaintiffs would not have been entitled to have an order
It follows that the motion was properly denied, and the order should, therefore, be affirmed.
Patterson, P. J., Ingraham, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed.
