[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 436 The Appellate Division has exercised its discretion in refusing to entertain jurisdiction of the plaintiff's action, by refusing a new trial of the action and by dismissing his complaint, and it cannot well be said that grounds were lacking for its action. That it possessed this discretionary power is not to be doubted. When created, its jurisdiction was to be that which was exercised by the former "Supreme Court at its general terms" and it remains a part of the Supreme Court. (Code Civ. Proc. sec. 220.) Its powers of review comprehend the right to review an exercise of discretion by the inferior courts and, equally, the right to exercise its own discretion, independently, when the facts, or circumstances, of the case are such as to justify it. If, in the present case, the action had been between non-residents of this state, there could be no question as to the right of the court below to take the action it did. In such cases, the discretion has been exercised both in entertaining, and in refusing to entertain, jurisdiction; the exercise depending upon the special circumstances of the particular case. (See Collard v. Beach,81 App. Div. 582; De Witt v. Buchanan, 54 Barb. 31; Gardner v. Thomas, 14 Johns. 134.) In Burdick v. Freeman, (120 N.Y. 420), the existence of this discretionary power was distinctly recognized. What that case decided was that where the Supreme Court, in the exercise of its discretion, had entertained jurisdiction of an action between non-residents, for a personal injury, the defendant not being entitled to a dismissal of the action, as a matter of right, and having lain by until the close of the trial, without having theretofore raised the question of the court's jurisdiction, by answer or otherwise, and the General Term having affirmed the plaintiff's judgment, this court would not listen to his claim that the action should have been dismissed in the Supreme Court.
In the present case, the plaintiff, being a resident of the state, was entitled to bring an action, (Code Civ. Proc. sec. 1780), and, in the absence of fraud, or collusion, the jurisdiction of the Surrogate's Court to grant the letters of administration *Page 438 could not be questioned collaterally. (O'Connor v. Huggins,113 N.Y. 511; Hoes v. N.Y., N.H. H.R.R. Co., 173 ib. 435.) But the facts, when disclosed by the evidence, plainly, warranted the inference that fraud, or collusion, had been practiced in procuring the plaintiff's appointment as administrator for the purpose of suing in this jurisdiction. On the undisputed evidence, the plaintiff was not entitled to gain a standing in our courts. The account in the savings bank was in the name of "Carmela Galeazza and husband, Francisco, or either." Upon her death, the husband could, and should, have withdrawn the moneys, under the very terms of the deposit, which gave to him the right, at any time, during her life, or as her survivor. Instead of withdrawing the moneys and causing administration to be had in the New Jersey courts, where it properly belonged, upon every ground, he withdrew half of the principal sum and, then, gave the savings bank book to a corporation, as security for becoming surety on the administrator's bond. The very next day, the administrator commences an action in this state, whose citizens possess no interest in the subject-matter of the litigation. The whole proceeding on the part of the husband and the plaintiff was such as to justify the belief that they were engaged in a collusive effort to get the action against the defendant into our courts. The result of their practices was to give but a technical, or colorable, right to maintain the action here. If the deceased had survived the accident, she could not have maintained any action in this state for the personal injury. Thus, the case is one where the plaintiff seeks to recover damages against a New Jersey corporation, by force of the provisions of a statute of that state, for the benefit exclusively of its citizens, for a wrong committed there. The statute of New Jersey being similar to ours in the provisions giving a right of action to an administrator, in such a case, our courts might entertain the action here upon the ground of comity; but I doubt exceedingly that the plaintiff's ground is any stronger. However, it was sufficient that the Appellate Division could see into the flimsiness, or pretense, *Page 439 of the proceedings to invest the plaintiff with the right to sue here. It could well hold that the court was not bound to exercise jurisdiction, although the plaintiff was a resident, where, as Mr. Justice INGRAHAM says, in his opinion, "those solely benefited are non-residents and where no reason exists why the liability cannot be enforced in the state where the parties reside and where the accident happened * * * but resort must be had to the laws of that state (New Jersey) to determine whether or not a cause of action exists." (131 App. Div. 833.) The scheme for gaining a standing in our courts, if not as fraudulent, is quite as transparent, or collusive in its nature, as was the device in Hoes v. N.Y., N.H. H.R.R. Co., (supra), where, after death, some personal property of the deceased was brought into this state, for the purpose of founding a claim for the application for letters of administration. As a question of policy, it is intolerable that our courts should be impeded in their administration of justice, and that the people of the state should be burdened with expense, in redressing wrongs committed in another state, for the benefit, solely, of its citizens, and where the remedy is in the enforcement of its statutes.
I advise, therefore, the affirmance of the judgment appealed from.
CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT, WERNER, WILLARD BARTLETT and CHASE, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, J., dissents.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.