51 Barb. 532 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1868
The referee found, from the evidence before him, that the judgment of the county court, upon which the execution was issued and the property in question sold, to the vendee of the appellant, was void, inasmuch as no judgment had ever been rendered in the justice’s court.
This presents a new question, of considerable importance, and deserves careful consideration. The Code (§ 63) provides that, “ a justice of the peace, on the demand of a party in whose favor he shall have rendered a judgment, shall give a transcript thereof, which may be filed and docketed in the office of the clerk of the county where the judgment was rendered.” The section further provides that the time of the receipt of the transcript by the clerk shall be entered thereon, and entered in the docket, “ and from that time the judgment shall be a judgment of the county court.”
In the transcript which the justice furnished for the county clerk, it appeared that judgment was rendered, and entered in the docket of the justice, on the day the verdict was rendered. And in his certificate he set forth that the transcript was “ a correct transcript from his docket” of a judgment on record in his office, and of the whole of said judgment. On the trial, the justice was examined as a witness, and produced his docket, and it appeared that there was no such entry upon his docket as appeared in the transcript certified to by him, and that none such had ever been made there. The justice, on his examination, testified that he made the entries which appeared upon his docket at the time the verdict was rendered, but was unable to state that he had made any entry of judgment in his minutes, or anywhere. The verdict was rendered and entered in the docket the 23d of January, 1862, and the transcript given on the 3d of February thereafter. "Upon this evi
The appellant’s counsel excepted to the ruling of the referee, excluding the answer to the question put to the justice, by him, as to whether he made any other entry of judgment in the action, except that which he made on page 112 of his docket. The objection to the answer was that if he made any other entry, the' entry itself would be the best evidence. The question obviously did not refer to the justice’s minutes, as the justice had been examined fully in regard to the entries made therein. If it referred to some other place in the docket, the docket was present, and the entry would show for itself, and furnish the best evidence ; and in any case, I apprehend, it is not competent
But even if the judgment was not void, I am of the opinion that the referee was right in holding that the property was the property of the respondent at the time the levy was made.
The contract, according to the finding of the referee, and according to the evidence in behalf of the respondent, was not within the statute of frauds, but belonged to that other class of contracts where the vendor agrees to furnish materials and manufacture for, and deliver to the vendee, at a future day. It appears from the evidence that Daniels, the judgment debtor and respondent’s vendor, wanted work for the winter, and applied to the respondent to furnish employment; and it was agreed between them that Daniels should cut timber and- make it into railroad ties fz’om his own land, or land in his possession, for the respondent, and deliver the ties at twelve cents apiece; that the respondent should furnish money -as the work progressed, and the ties were to be the property of the respondent as soon as thetz-ees were cut from the stump. The timber for the .ties had all been cut and hauled upon the land of a third pei’son, and there "vez’bally turned ' out to the respondent as his property, before the levy. There was some conflicting evidence, but the finding of the referee is conclusive as to the facts, upon this question. The true criterion in all such cases is, whether the woz’k and labor required in order to prepare the subject matter of the conti’act for delivery, is to be done, for the vendor himself, or for the vendee. If for the latter it is simply a case of hiring, and not within the statute. (Parker v.
E. D. Smith, Johnson and J. C. Smith, Justices.]