30 How. Pr. 76

SUPREME COURT.

Robert Lane and another agt. Floyd Bailey and another.

An appeal from an order dewping a motion for a nexo trial made on the judge’s minutes, may be taken to the general term after judgment has been entered in the action. (This agrees -with Pumpelly agt. The Village of Owego, 22 How. Pr. R. 385; and is adverse to Soverhill agt. Post, Id. 386.)

Should the verdict be set aside, the special term can, on motion, vacate the judgment, as it will then have no foundation.

JYew York General Term,

November, 1865.

Before Ingraham, P. J., Leonard and Barnard, Justices.

This was a motion to dismiss an appeal from an order entered upon the judge’s minutes at the.circuit, denying a motion for a new trial. Judgment was entered for the *77plaintiffs, and the defendants failed to appeal from the judgment, but appealed from the order entered upon the judge’s minutes, making and serving a case in the usual form, to bring up for review the sufficiency "of the evidence to sustain the judgment. This was a re-argument ordered on motion of the appellants.

Timothy Cronin, for appellants.

S. T. Freeman, for respondents.

By the court, Leonard, J.

The second subdivision of section 349, gives the right of appeal from an order denying a motion for a new trial. No qualification is imposed limiting the right to cases where the judgment has not been entered. This subject was considered at general term in the sixth district (Pumpelly agt. The Village of Owego, 22 How. Pr. R. 385). The right'to appeal was there upheld in a similar case to the present. On the next page of the same volume occurs the case of Soverhill agt. Post, decided in the third district, where a contrary rule was held, but as it seems to me on very insufficient reasons. The court consider the appeal in the latter case as nugatory, because the judgment will no.t be affected by the decision on the appeal, even should the verdict be set aside.

With great respect, I differ. Should the verdict be set aside, the special term, can, on motion, vacate the judgment, as it will then have no foundation. Where an appeal is taken from a judgment, and there has been an appeal also from a denial of motion for a new trial on the judge’s minutes, we think it the better course to hear both appeals argued on the appeal from the judgment. By section 329 of the Code, all intermediate orders may be reviewed on the appeal from the judgment, and the facts as well as the law, may under such circumstances be reviewed.

The motion to dismiss the appeal should be denied, but without costs.

Lane v. Bailey
30 How. Pr. 76

Case Details

Name
Lane v. Bailey
Decision Date
Nov 1, 1865
Citations

30 How. Pr. 76

Jurisdiction
New York

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