117 N.E. 1057 | NY | 1917
The action is one by servant against employer to recover damages for wrongful discharge. The defendant's motion for judgment on the pleadings was denied at Special Term. On appeal to the Appellate Division, the order was reversed, and the complaint dismissed. Judgment of dismissal was entered in the office of the clerk of New York county on July 15, 1916, and was served the same day. *12
The plaintiff could have appealed from that judgment directly to this court. He did not do so. He appealed from it to the Appellate Division, and thus asked that court to review its own judgment. The Appellate Division could properly have dismissed the appeal. We so held upon a similar state of facts inSilverstein v. Standard Accident Ins. Co. of Detroit
(
We have said that the Appellate Division has affirmed its own judgment. It has heard and decided an appeal from itself. That is something which it had no power to do. It could, of course, have granted a re-argument, but neither in form nor in substance is that what it did. It did not reopen the earlier appeal; it heard a new one. It did not grant a favor; it yielded to a claim of right. It did not reconsider the merits; it affirmed the regularity of the judgment entered pursuant to its order. The pronouncement neither injured the plaintiff nor added to his rights. In such circumstances, the appeal to this court becomes an idle form. If we were to hear it, we could never reach the merits. The utmost that we could do would be to say that the Appellate Division should substitute a judgment dismissing the appeal for the present judgment of affirmance. That would not help the plaintiff, for the earlier judgment dismissing his complaint would stand. Nothing of substance, therefore, is involved in this appeal.
The defendant argues that under Will v. Barnwell (
The motion should be granted, and the appeal dismissed with costs, and ten dollars costs of motion.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CHASE, CUDDEBACK, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Appeal dismissed. *14