7 Rob. 225 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1867
At the time of the decision of this cause, it was the law of this court, that the dismissal of a complaint in an action such as this, and under the circumstances of this dismissal, had no greater or further force than that kind of judgment which, prior to the passage of the Code, was denominated a judgment of nonsuit, and did not bar a subsequent action for the same cause. (Harrison v. Wood, 2 Duer, 50.) This decision has never been distinctly overruled by the Court of Appeals; nor has it been changed or modified by any decision of this court. There cannot be the slightest' doubt of the correctness of that doctrine, and were it not possible that either other courts, to which the plaintiffs might resort, or the Court of Appeals, might hereafter give to the term. “ dismissing the complaint,” when used under circumstances like the present, an effect and operation different from that given to them by this court, this motion ought to be denied as wholly unnecessary. But as other courts, and the Court of Appeals, may regard a judgment, “ that the complaint be dismissed,” without any qualification annexed thereto, as a decision on the merits, and therefore a bar to a subsequent action for the same cause, (notwithstanding it were rendered under circumstances like the present,) I am disposed so to amend the judgment, as in terms to give to the decision of the judge, the effect, in express terms,
Ordered accordingly, without costs.