3 Abb. Ct. App. 86 | NY | 1863
By the Court.
The record of this case appears to be very defective. This court can only look at the
I place no particular reliance on the words “ without costs,” because those words would naturally apply only to the costs of the appeal to this court. The judgment would have been the same if these words had been omitted, for the reason that the supreme court could not add to the judgment contained in the remittitur from this court, a new or further judgment, even for costs of the appeal of that court. If that course were allowed,it would either deprive the party affected by such new judgment of the right of appeal, in regard to it, or would authorize several successive appeals from the supreme court to this court, before the case could be remitted to the court of original jurisdiction. It has often been held that no appeal from the supreme court to this court can properly be brought until that court, by its judgment, has finally disposed of the whole matter before it, including the right to costs as well as other rights of the parties. Upon appeal from such judgment, or any part of it, it undoubtedly becomes the duty of this court, to affirm, reverse or modify, the whole judgment, or such part of it as
It is insisted, by the respondent’s counsel, that the costs of the appeal to the supreme court are given, by statute, to the prevailing party, and that, consequently, that court was bound to include them in its judgment. 3 R. S. 5 ed. 905, §§ 19, 30. If the case were within this statute, the position of the respondent’s counsel might, perhaps, be correct; but the statute applies only to appeals involving the validity or proof of wills, and not to cases like the present, which relates only to the granting or withholding of letters testamentary upon a will, the validity or execution of which does not appear by the present record to have been involved in the appeal. In such cases, costs are granted or refused, in the discretion of the court. 3 R. S. 909, § 6; Code of Pro. § 471; 22 N. Y. 433.
To prevent a possible inference of an intention to impute to the supreme court a disposition to overstep its authority, or to disregard in any respect the judgment of this court, it is proper to say that no such opinion is entertained, or intended to be expressed. On looking at the opinion delivered in the supreme court, and at the report of the decision of this court on the former appeal (34 N. Y. 166), it appears very probable that other facts exist, not shown by the present record, which might have justified the judgment of the supreme court. The transcript from the court below is obviously very defective, as it does not conform to the rules of this court, or to those of the supreme court, touching such appeals (Rule 3, Court of Appeals; Rule 44, Supreme Court, Uo. 51 of 1871); but as neither party has asked for any amendment of it, or any further return (Rule 3, Court of Appeals), we can only pronounce judgment upon the record as it appears before us.
The judgment of the supreme court, so far as it is appealed from, should be reversed, but without the costs of this appeal to either party.
A majority of the judges concurred.
Judgment reversed, without costs.