The defendant claimed and insisted, upon the trial of this cause, that the court had no jurisdiction over the cause or the person of the defendant The objection is based upon the fact that this cause had been appealed tb the court of appeals from a former judgment of this court in the action, and the judgment had been reversed anda new trial ordered, and the remittitur, although awarded and sent to this court, had never been filed with the clerk of this court. It appears from the bill of exceptions that the remittitur had been delivered to the defendant, who defends in person, and that upon the trial he put it in evidence in the case. He called Alfred Purdy, deputy clerk of Chenango, and proved by him that he had made the search and could not find any remittitur on file in this cause. He then put the remittitur into the hands of Purdy while upon the stand, and proved by him that the paper handed to him was the remittitur, and that it never had been filed. After the court of appeals had reversed the judgment and awarded the remittitur ordering a new trial, the plaintiff applied at a special term of the supreme court for leave to amend his complaint, which was opposed by the defendant without any objection being raised to the juris
I am aware that for every purpose of the jurisdiction of the appellate court, the record itself is supposed to be removed, although in point of fact a transcript only is sent. (Brown agt. Clarke, 3 J. R. 443 ; Grahams Pr. 954, 2 ed.; 2 R. S. 596, § 42.) The court below, while the appeal is pending, as thejr formerly had after writ of error brought, have still control over the judgment in regard to making amendments, and the judgment is still regarded as remaining in that court for all the purposes of amendment. (Graham's Pr. 667, 954; 2 Cow. 408 ; 3 J. R. 95; 15 J. R. 318; 6 Cow. R. 606; 8 Cow. R. 746 ; 1 Cow. R. 65 ; 7 Cow. R. 775.) I am of opinion, that after the remittitur has issued from the court of appeals under the seal of that court, and has been delivered to the prevailing
I regard it too clear to render any discussion of the matter at all profitable, that Absalom Calkins was, and is liable to the plaintiff for his fees in executing the order of reference in the suit of Calkins agt. Isbell, Tucker and others. A bare statement of the case is quite sufficient to make his liability entirely apparent. That was the case of a bill filed by Calkins to redeem certain premises from the lien of a mortgage. The mortgagee, and those claiming under him, had been in possession of the premises for many years, and Calkins, the mortgagor,
The said Calkins being thus clearly liable for Judson’s fees in executing that order of reference, the defendant Gray, as his solicitor in that suit, wrote to Calkins on the 3d of March, 1849, inclosing a note of $155 94, payable to said Gray or bearer, saying to Calkins that, if he would sign that note and return it to him, he would advance to Judson his fees as referee. The note was signed by Galkins and returned to Gray, and the plaintiff has brought this suit to recover, upon Gray’s promise thus made, the amount of his fees as referee in that suit, and having recovered before Justice Shauklawd, in the circuit court, the defendant claims and insists that he is not liable, and that the judgment should be reversed. I have abstained from stating any of the subsequent dealings between Calkins and the defendant in regard to that note, as they were all after the commencement of the suit, which was on the 4th of March, 1850. They could not do anything to prejudice
The same rule is held in the courts of Pennsylvania: Hurd agt. Holdship, 2 Walts’ R. 104; see also 7 Conn. R. 347. This doctrine does not rest upon the ground of any actual or supposed relationship between the parties, as some of the earlier cases would seem to indicate, nor upon the reason that the defendant, by entering into such an agreement, has impliedly made himself the agent of the plaintiff. It rests upon the broader and more satisfactory basis, that the law, operating on the act of the parties, creates the duty and establishes the privity, and implies the promise and obligations on which the action is founded. The case at bar falls clearly within this principle. The agreement in question, having beén made for the benefit of the plaintiff, on a sufficient consideration, and
The case was submitted to this court on appeal.
March Term, 1859. The judgment was affirmed with costs, and ten per cent, damages. No opinion was written in this court.