Livermore v. Bainbridge
Livermore v. Bainbridge
Opinion of the Court
In the case of Gray v. Fiske, recently decided in this court, 53 N. Y., 630, in which an appeal was taken from the order of the general term of the superior court, affirming an order of the special term, denying a motion to set aside a judgment entered on the report
The right of the general term to review an order of a special term made upon a summary application in an action after judgment, when it affects a substantial right, is given by section 349 of the code ; and the jurisdiction of the general term under this section, to review orders made by the special term in respect to matters resting in the discretion of the court which involve substantial rights and interests, has been constantly exercised, and has been sanctioned and approved by this court (People v. N. Y. Central R. R. Co., 29 N. Y., 418). This jurisdiction is convenient, and is indeed essential to the proper administration of justice. The orders which come under the designation of discretionary orders frequently involve important rights, and the order in this case is one of that character. The effect of the order is to deprive the defendant of a judgment in his favor, obtained after a trial before the referee upon controverted questions of fact, and he is remitted to a new trial, with the hazard of a less favorable result. It would be unsafe and dangerous to conclude litigants in such a case, by the order of the special term, without the power to apply to an appellate tribunal to correct any error or inadvertence into which the judge at special term may have fallen in the exercise of the discretion.
But this court has steadily disclaimed the right to review, by appeal, an order of a special term, in matters resting in discretion. The rights of parties in orders of that character are not defined and established by fixed legal principles, nor by settled rules of equity. Each case must depend in a great measure upon its own pe
We are of opinion that Gray v. Fiske is a decisive authority against the right of the appellant to maintain this appeal. The supervisory power of the supreme court over the conduct of referees, and its jurisdiction to set aside judgments for misconduct on their part during progress of the cause, was distinctly asserted in that case, and the court declared that the same rules should be applied as were adopted by courts in applications to set aside a verdict for the misconduct of jurors. This view has been taken by the supreme court in several cases (4 How. Pr., 253; 9 Id., 1, 7; 12 Id., 297). It is strenuously insisted by the counsel for the
It does not aid the appellant to show that the order was not justified by the facts upon which it was based, or that the discretion of the court, below in the particular case, was improvidently exercised. It is not sufficient to show that injustice has been done, but it must appear that it was done under circumstances which authorize this court to interfere.
The affidavits brought to the attention of the court a circumstance upon which the claim of misconduct was made. The judge at special term was called upon to decide in respect to it. From the nature of the case, what-is misconduct on the part of the jury or referee, and what facts establish it, are inquiries which can not ordinarily be determined by the application of exact rules of law, and the decision must be left mainly to the good sense and sound judgment of the judge, before whom the inquiry is originally prosecuted. Different minds may reach different conclusions upon the same facts, and it is not to be supposed that a judge under the guise of discretion will seek to do injustice.
All the judges concurred.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LIVERMORE against BAINBRIDGE
- Status
- Published