57 N.Y.S. 563 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The action being at issue, the usual order of reference was made to ascertain and report the rights, shares and interests of the several parties to the action and whether the land should be partitioned or
It is settled by authority that the filing of exceptions ti> reports of this character will not be recognized nor is it required for the purpose of protecting the rights of any .party. (Doremus v. Doremus, 76 Hun, 337.) Although it is not required that exceptions to the referee’s report shall be taken, yet upon motion for confirmation of the same, and the entry of interlocutory judgment thereon, parties, in interest are entitled to appear and be heard in opposition thereto upon any question which is made the subject of adjudication in the report of the referee, and which properly finds place in the interlocutory judgment entered thereon.
Section 1546 of the Code of Civil Procedure provided“ The interlocutory judgment must declare what is the right, share, or interest of each party in the property, as far as the same has been ¡ascertained, and must determine the rights of the parties therein.”
In the present case the claim of the respondent Stacom is that she was entitled to a lien superior to the subsequent incumbrancers, ¡and the report of the referee so determined. Upon this subject there is no dispute as to the amount of the lien, assuming that she was entitled thereto, and the question whether she was so entitled was
Upon this subject the appellants became entitled to the judgment of the court, and while their exceptions to the report were not necessary to raise such question, yet the filing of such exceptions ■did not debar them from insisting upon any legal right of which they were possessed. In effect what was done operated to present them in the attitude of opposing the confirmation of the report and the entry of judgment thereon, and the effect of the court’s decision was to deny them such right, in consequence of which the confirmation of the report and the entry of interlocutory judgment thereon was a denial of the appellants’ rights irt this respect; and while the appeal from the order dismissing the exceptions raises no question in this court, yet the appeal from the interlocutory judgment has the effect of presenting the question as to the validity of the lien, and had this judgment determined the rights of these parties in this respect we should have been called upon to review the question as ■one of law, based upon the testimony, the report of the referee and the confirmation of the same by the court. But in fact the interlocutory judgment, although required by the Code to determine such issue, does not. by its terms effect such result, the provision in this respect being that the respective right and share of the parties is as follows: “To the-lien, if any, of defendant .Mary Stacom for twenty-five hundred dollars and interest,” etc.
The question, therefore, is at what stage of a partition suit, under the Code of Civil Procedure, the validity, priority and amount of specific liens on undivided shares are to be determined. The learned judge at Special Term was of opinion that under sections 1563 to 1566 such controversies are only to be determined after the sale in :a proceeding to obtain payment of the lien out of the proceeds of the share deposited in court. This view I think erroneous. Under the Revised Statutes it was not necessary in the first instance, in a proceeding for partition, to make lienors on undivided shares parties. (2 R. S. 318, § 8.) But if the commissioners reported that partition . was impracticable and the proceeding went to a sale, then it was necessary to amend the petition and make all specific lienors parties. (Id. 324, § 42.) It was also necessary in case of a sale to advertise
It follows, that the interlocutory judgment should be reversed,, and the case remitted to the Special Term for determination.
All concurred.
- Interlocutory judgment reversed and cause.remitted to thp Special Term for- decision on report of referee, with one bill of costs to the-appellants to be paid out of the proceeds of sale. j .