Central Trust Co. v. Pittsburgh, Shawmut & Northern Railroad

The facts in this controversy were fully stated in the opinion of the court on an earlier appeal *Page 70 (223 N.Y. 347). It is unnecessary to restate them now. At that time we had before us for review a question certified by the Appellate Division. The question was whether the Special Term had power to determine "the priority of the receiver's certificates, upon the motion and the papers before it, as against the first mortgage bondholders or their trustee named in the first mortgage." We answered the question "yes," and remitted the case to the Appellate Division to proceed in accordance with the opinion. We did not attempt to determine that the petition had made out a case for the granting of the relief demanded. We held merely that there was jurisdiction in the Supreme Court, upon the notice given to the trustee and bondholders, to determine whether the relief demanded should be granted or withheld. The appeal brought up for review the question certified, and no other (Code Civ. Pro. sec. 190; Davis v. Cornue, 151 N.Y. 172).

The Appellate Division, with its jurisdiction thus established, considered the case upon the merits. It reversed the order upon the facts, and remitted the matter to the Special Term to take such further proof upon the questions involved in the proceeding as either party might submit. The argument is that the terms of our remittitur were disregarded by this postponement of the final ruling. We think the argument will not hold. There is no need to determine to what extent jurisdiction is inherent in this court to revise an order involving a departure from its mandate, for we are satisfied that in this instance no departure has been shown (Matter of Sanford Fork Tool Co., 160 U.S. 247; Ex parteSawyer, 21 Wall. 235; Perkins v. Fourniquet, 14 How. [U.S.] 328, 330; Steinfeld v. Zeckendorf, 239 U.S. 26; People v.Priori, 163 N.Y. 99, 101). We required the Appellate Division to act. We imposed no limitation upon the nature of its action. There was the same broad power afterwards as before to grant relief or to refuse it or to permit another *Page 71 hearing (Syracuse Savings Bank v. Syracuse, Chenango N YR.R. Co., 88 N.Y. 110, 115). The Appellate Division is a branch of the Supreme Court, and the petitioner is its receiver. It was under no duty to direct its own officer to issue certificates that would have priority over underlying mortgages while its mind and its conscience were unsatisfied that justice would thus be done. It would not command its representative "to do a shabby thing" (Ex parte Simmonds, L.R. 16 Q.B. 308). It might desire information that would show in greater detail the application already made by the receiver of moneys borrowed on certificates. It might find itself unable to determine the equities of prior bondholders without a fuller showing of the extent to which such application had resulted to their benefit. Even if satisfied that the petition made out a prima facie case for the granting of relief, it might still be unwilling to act until the bondholders and the trustee, who had appeared specially to contest the jurisdiction, had been given another opportunity to elucidate the transaction and contest the petition on the merits. In brief, it was under no duty to give instructions to its officer upon a presentation of the case which it believed to be inadequate or partial. The relief prayed for by the receiver was not a matter of strict right. His petition was addressed to the discretion of the court, guided, it is true, by precedent, but controlled, in its final exercise, by a sense of equity and justice. We had neither power nor purpose to fetter discretion in sustaining jurisdiction.

The receiver says, however, that our order was disregarded when the Appellate Division permitted new affidavits to be filed by trustee and bondholders in opposition to the petition. These affidavits showed that during the pendency of the appeal there had been a decision adverse to the receiver in a plenary suit intended to adjudicate the interests and priorities of all the conflicting claimants. We do not understand that the Appellate *Page 72 Division received these affidavits as evidence in disproof of the averments of the petition. We understand them to have been received in support of the suggestion that evidence pro and con would be available if a rehearing were permitted. Broad powers, original as well as appellate, are lodged in the Appellate Division as a branch of the Supreme Court (Matter of Barkley,42 App. Div. 597, 608, and cases there cited; Syracuse SavingsBank v. Syracuse, C. N.Y.R.R. Co., supra). We do not need at this time to attempt to mark their limits. An error, if there was any, in the acceptance of the affidavits, involves no departure from the terms of our remittitur. In answer to the question certified, we held that there was power to adjudicate. By thus holding, we did not invest ourselves with jurisdiction to supervise the adjudication, when thereafter made, for irregularity or error. This order, even though erroneous, would not come within our jurisdiction, if it had been made before we settled the power of the Supreme Court to proceed to a decision. It is not brought within our jurisdiction because it was made afterwards. The limit of our power is to enforce compliance with our mandate (Steinfeld v. Zeckendorf; Ex parte Sawyer,supra).

A motion heretofore submitted to this court for the dismissal of the appeal was denied without opinion. We thought the question of jurisdiction so closely interwoven with the question of the merits that the one could not safely be determined without some consideration of the other. In the light of ampler argument and more deliberate examination of the record, we are satisfied that the order is not final, that there has been no departure from our mandate, and that there is nothing here for our review.

The appeal should be dismissed with costs.

HISCOCK, Ch. J., POUND and CRANE JJ., concur with CARDOZO, J.; CHASE, J., dissents in memorandum, as follows: *Page 73