26 N.Y.S. 798 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1893
The defendants, after the trial, submitted proposed requests, which the trial judge declined to pass upon because of prefatory matter therein which called, in certain contingencies, for the changing of the requests as to matter of fact' to requests as to matters of law, and also the reverse, and required each sentence to be passed upon, and for the further reason that the court had already passed upon the material matters in the case at the request of the plaintiff, It appears that the defendants made 58 requests to find facts, and 22 to find conclusions of law, and requested the court, if it refused to find the facts as requested, to find the same matters as conclusions of law, and, if it refused to find the law as requested, to find the same matters as fact. This is the prefatory matter referred to. This is not all. They stated that each “sentence of each proposed finding is prepared separately, as if separately numbered.” The court, in Steubing v. Railroad Co., 138 N. Y. 658, 66l, 34 N. E. 369, considered the precise question presented here, and decided that the practice followed by the defendants, was not only unauthorized, but one “not to be tolerated;” that it was not needful for the protection of the rights of any party, and that the tendency was to ensnare the trial judge, and frequently .to defeat the ends of justice, by introducing mistakes, confusion, and uncertainty into the record. While section 1023 of the Code was intended to provide a uniform and adequate method of discovering the grounds and principles upon which were based the judgments rendered by courts and referees, it never contemplated that either should be required to pass upon anything more than the facts material to the case óf the side presenting the findings, and deemed by it established by the evidence, and not included in findings made at the request of the other side. Nor was it intended that the court or referee should be required to find upon every piece of evidence offered, or its cogency or effect in leading to the findings or conclusions made. Proper practice requires that a request to find either facts or law.should be plainly stated in a single proposition, the