6 N.Y.S. 513 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1888
Action to restrain Naehr from enforcing execution, and to set aside judgment in Naehr’s favor, in a district court. The justice did not decide the case within eight days after submission, but in eleven days after submission. It was claimed that the judgment was void, because not entered within eight days after the cause was submitted to the justice. The judgment appeared upon the face of the record to have been entered on the 24-th day of August, 1888. The Code gives to the losing party 20 days within which to make his appeal. The date from which the time to appeal is computed is the time at which the judgment is entered in the justice’s docket. The evidence shows very clearly that, though the record makes it appear that judgment was entered on August 24th, there was no entry of judgment until late in the afternoon of August 27th. This seems not to have been fraudulently done, and I am not prepared to cast any reflection upon either the justice or the clerk for the error in the entry of the judgment. The proceedings were had in midsummer, and the justice who caused the entry to be made did not reside in the district, but was holding court temporarily in the place of the judge of the district. He sent the papers by mail, and the date that the papers bear was probably the day on whicli the decision was made and reduced to writing. A delay in mailing may well have caused the non-arrival