People ex rel. Cannon v. Superior Court

18 Wend. 302 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1836

By the Court,

Bronson, J.

Without intending to say anything upon the merits of the application made by the relators to- the superior court, but taking it for granted that the report of the referees was against'law and should have been set aside,-1 am of opinion that a mandamus is not the appropriate remedy. This writ is only proper where the party has a legal right, and there, is no other adequate legal remedy. (12 Johns. R. 414; 1 Cowen, 423.) A mandamus will not be granted, where error will lie. (2 Johns. Cas. 72.)

[576] Since the decisions of the court for the correction of errors in the case of The *303Rensselaer Glass Factory v. Reed, (5 Cowen, 587,) and in the case of Feeter v. Heath, (11 Wendell, 477,) it can no longer be doubted that a writ of error will lie on the judgment of any court confirming a report made by referees, where the cause was ¡referred in pursuance of the statute. The facts may in some form be spread upon the record so as to give the party the same opportunity for a review that he' would have on a trial by jury. As to the legal objections taken on the hearing, the case will be similar in character to a bill of exceptions ; and as to the questions of law growing out of the proofs before the referees, the case will partake of the character of a special verdict. Questions of law only, and not the weight of evidence, can be examined on a writ of error ; and the rule is the same on a motion for a mandamus. (Ex parte Baily, 2 Cowen, 479.)

In the case of The Rensselaer Glass Factory v. Reed, a statement of the facts, as they appeared before the referees, was drawn up under the direction of the chief justice and annexed to the record. In Feeter v. Heath, the referees made a special report of the facts to this court, and this report was incorporated at large in the judgment record. In the case under consideration, the facts which appeared on the hearing were presented to the superior court by the affidavit of the attorney for the defendants, and as there was no dispute .about what the evidence was before the referees, they were not called upon to make a special report. I do not think it necessary to determine in what form the- facts should in this case be placed upon the record for the purpose of giving the relators, the full benefit of a writ of error, though I am inclined to the opinion that the chancellor has pointed out the proper mode, in the opinion delivered by him in the case of Feeter v. Heath. It cannot be doubted that the superior court, on a proper application for that purpose, will take such order in the premises as may be necessary to enable the party to bring error; and it is enough for the present occasion that the relators have an appropriate legal remedy, without the aid of a mandamus.

Motion denied.

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