3 N.Y.S. 248 | Superior Court of Buffalo | 1888
The defendant appeals from a judgment rendered against him by the municipal court of Buffalo. By the return of the judge it appears that the sum for which judgment was demanded did not exceed $50. No retrial of the case can therefore be had in the appellate court. In the notice of appeal served defendant has demanded a new trial. Plaintiff now insists that as a new trial cannot be had, the appeal is not authorized by the Code of Procedure, and that no appeal has in law been taken. In support of this position plaintiff relies upon Thorn v. Roods, 47 Hun, 433. In that case the supreme court, Third department, affirmed an order refusing an amendment of a notice of appeal, and dismissing the appeal, in a case where the defendant, intending to appeal upon the law, had omitted to erase from the printed blank notice of appeal, “the appellant demands a new trial in the appellate court.” The ground of this decision seems to be that the Code provides for two classes of appeals,—one upon the law, and the other for a new trial; that the notice of appeal containing the demand characterized the appeal; and, the time having expired in which an appeal upon the law might be taken, the court had no power to grant the amendment, as its effect would be to perfect another and different appeal, transferring the appeal taken into an appeal for a different purpose, and, under color of amendment, extend the time for taking an appeal. With hesitation I announce a dissent from this conclusion. Code Proc. c. 19, provides for courts of justices of the peace, and proceedings therein. Title 8, art. 1, provides for appeals generally, and by section 3044 it is provided that the only mode of reviewing a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace in a civil action is by appeal. By section 3046 such appeal is taken by serving up.on the justice who rendered the judgment, and upon the respondent, a written notice of appeal. The notice here provided for is the only mode by which such appeals may be brought up for review. Article 3, under the head of “Appeal for a New Trial in the Appellate Court,” provides, by section 3068: “Where an issue of fact or an issue of law was joined before the justice, and the sum for which judgment was demanded by either party in his pleading exceeds fifty dollars, * * * the appellant may, in his notice of appeal, demand a new trial in the appellate court, and thereupon he is entitled thereto. ” It thus appears that the primary right entitling the appellant to a retrial in the appellate court rests in the fact that the sum for which judgment was demanded must have exceed $50, but .this fact alone does not entitle him to such retrial. He is required to express his desire by a demand for a new trial contained in the notice, else he cannot insist upon it. Without the concurrence of these two facts no new trial can be had. The only office, therefore, of the demand contained in such notice, is to give notice that appellant insists upon the right secured by the section, for in all other respects the notice is the same as an appeal upon the law. Article 2, under the head of “Appeal where a New Trial is not Had in the Appellate Court,” provides by section 3062: “If the case is one where the appellant is not entitled to, or has not demanded, a new trial in the appellate court, as prescribed in section 3068 of this act, the appeal may be brought to a hearing in the appellate court, at
This, supplemented by a demand in the notice of appeal, secures to the appellant such right, but the demand alone does not confer it; and, where such right does not exist, I think the demand is to be treated as surplusage, and the appeal becomes one to be heard upon the original papers or certified copies, by the court, and these are the papers which the justice is required to return upon the service of such notice. This construction is in harmony with the practice of the courts in many cases. In Matteson v. Hall, 64 How. Pr. 515, the general term, Fourth department, reversed an order of the county court dismissing an appeal, where the appellant demanded in his notice a newr trial; holding that it should be heard as an appeal upon the law. In Houghton v.