14 Barb. 577 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1853
Had the judge at circuit jurisdiction to make the order appealed from ? He certainly had on the day when the trial was called on. But the motion, it seems, was not then made; and the cause, for that reason, it is said, as to the circuit was out of court.
The universal practice is at variance with this idea. Motions are continually made at circuit in causes which have been passed on the calendar. Besides, the circuit, as now constituted, has ' jurisdiction, not to try a cause merely, but to render a judgment, whether of dismissal or otherwise, “ as the case (in the opinion of the judge) may require.” (Code, § 258.)
Waiving this point, it is said the notice of discontinuance ousted the jurisdiction. One of the cases cited by the plaintiff himself, (Morrison v. Ide, 3 Code Rep. 27,) decides that such a
First, it is said that there was no trial, and that without “ a trial has been had,” (Code, § 308,) there can be no per centage. But within the spirit, if not the letter of the code, there was, we think, a trial, for all the purposes of warranting the allowance by way of indemnity to the defendant “ for his expenses in the action.” Oan a plaintiff, after putting a party to all the expenses of a trial, deprive him of the indemnity provided by law, merely by discontinuing at the moment of calling the jury ? Such a construction of the code would be to suppose that its framers attached more importance to form than substance.
But secondly, an allowance of a per centage may be made, without a trial being had, “ in any case, where the prosecution has been unreasonably or unfairly conducted.” And is not a discontinuance, unexplained, after repeated notices of trial, one of the indications of such a prosecution ? Besides, how does it appear that the affidavits on which the order was founded did
Edwards, Mitchell and Roosevelt, Justices.]
The order appealed from must therefore he affirmed, with costs.