The sole question presented in this case is whether the provisions of section 452 of the Code, to the effect that where a person not a party to an action has an interest in the subject thereof or in real property, the title to which may in any manner be affected by the judgment, makes application to the court to be made a party, it must direct him to be brought in by the proper amendment, imposes upon the court an absolute duty to require such party to be brought in upon his own application when he presents the proper proof, or whether the duty of the court is so far discretionary that it may .impose terms upon the applicant as a condition of his being made a party.
In my judgment, if any force is to be given to repeated adjudications of this court and the Court of Appeals, that question has been settled by authority and ought not now to be unsettled by an overruling of the cases which have decided it. In the case of Haas v. Craighead (
In the case of Earle v. Hart (
In Lawton v. Lawton (
The same question has necessarily been decided by the Court of Appeals as it seems to me. The law has always prescribed that no order was appealable to the Court of Appeals if it involved any question of discretion, and in all cases where the order appealed from might have been refused at the discretion of the Supreme Court, it was the duty of the Court of Appeals to dismiss the appeal. In the case of The People v. The Albany & Vermont R. R. Co. (
The same question was 23resented again to the Court of Appeals in the case of Johnston v. Donvan (
In the case of Ashton v. City of Rochester (
I have been unable to find any case, either in the Court of Appeals or in the General Term, which overrules these authorities or suggests any other construction of the section in question.
In Chapman v. Forbes (
In Rosenberg v. Salomon (
In the case of Matter of Bohnet v. The Mayor (
The question presented in this case is not of itself perhaps of great importance; but it is of importance, as it seems to me, that any rule of construction of the Code which is established by a long series of decisions should not be overthrown unless it is made to appear that the construction heretofore given to it is unquestionably wrong. If that construction is required by the language of the statute, but nevertheless produces inconvenience, the remedy is not with the courts, but with the Legislature.
The order of the Appellate Term should he reversed and the order of the General Term of the City Court should be affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Term.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Order of Appellate Term reversed, and order of General Term of the City Court affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Term.
