Koransky v. Greenberg

121 N.Y.S. 358 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910

Scott, J.:

Appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction restraining defendants and their attorneys from enforcing an execution. The action seeks the same relief and also an adjudication that the judgment upon which the execution has been issued is void. On February 20,1909, these defendants recovered a judgment in the Municipal Court against this plaintiff. On February 23, 1909, a transcript of this judgment was filed in the office of the clerk of the county of New *645York and an execution issued to the sheriff. It is said, although it is not material to the question presented on this appeal, that on’ the following day (February twenty-fourth) plaintiff conveyed her real property to her daughter-in-law. On February twenty-fifth an order was granted by the justice of the Municipal Court upon'plaintiff’s motion vacating the judgment and ordering a new trial. It was expressly recited in the order that the motion for a new trial was granted “upon payment of $10 costs to plaintiffs’ attorney within three days after the entry of this order.” The order was entered on March 22, 1909, but the costs were not paid, and on April 1, 1909, the attorney for the plaintiff in that' action, upon proof of non-payment of the costs, entered an order ex parte vacating the order which set aside the judgment and reinstating that judgment. The sole question involved is one of power in . the Municipal Court. If the same state of facts had arisen in this court it is clear that the vacation of the order for a new trial would be the proper remedy (Stokes v. Stokes, 38 App. Div. 215), and such an order could properly be made upon an ex parte application. (Stewart v. Berge, 4 Daly, 477.) It is not questioned that under section 256 of the Municipal Court Act (Laws of 1902, chap. 580) the justice had the power to impose- costs as a condition of granting a new trial, but it is claimed that no power is specifically given to a justice to vacate an order granting a new trial for non-compliance with a condition, and that the Municipal Court and its justices have no inherent power but only such as is expressly given to them. To some extent this is undoubtedly true. We are referred to a number of Appellate Term decisions wherein it has been held that a justice of. the Municipal Court, having once exercised ’the power given him to vacate a judgment and grant a new trial, could not thereafter reconsider his action or modify or alter his decision. Those cases are doubtless correctly decided, but they do not meet the present case, for in this case the act of the justice in vacating the order for a new trial was -not, properly speaking, a reversal or modification of his former decision, but an enforcement of it. The order for a new tidal having been expressly conditioned upon payment of the costs, never became fully operative until the costs were paid, and when the time for their payment expired the order became null and inoperative. The entry of an order vacating it was merely the *646formal declaration of that which had been, effected by the refusal to pay the costs. (Mitchell v. Menkle, 1 Hilt. 142.)

The order appealed from 'must, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion for an injunction denied, with ten dollars costs.

Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Clarke and Miller, JJ., concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements) and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.