The respondent’s counsel, by his motion to dismiss the appeal, challenges the jurisdiction of this court to entertain an appeal from the Municipal; Court, of the city of Mew York, borpugli of the Bronx, first district, which district is á part of the territory exscinded from Westchester county and annexed to the city and county-of Mew York by chapter 934 of the Laws of 1895. The Greater.Me.w York charter (Laws of 1897, chap. 378, § 1359) provides that there' shall be in the borough of the Bronx two districts of the Municipal Court, the first embracing the territory annexed to the city and county of Mew York by chapter 934 of the Laws of 1895. Section 1367 of the charter, as amended by chapter 546 of the Laws of 1898, provides for appeals from judgments rendered in the Municipal Court, in .part as follows: “ Such appeal shall be *219heard in such manner and by such justice or justices as the appellate ■division of the supreme court in the judicial department embracing the district wherein the action is brought shall direct, except that the .appellate division of the second judicial department may direct that .■such appeal he heard directly before that court.”
In People ex rel. Henderson v. Supervisor's (147 N. Y. 1) the •effect of the act of 1895 was under consideration. The Special Term in this department had directed the issue of a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the board of- supervisors of the county •of Westchester to re-assemble and divide the said county into three Assembly districts. The General Term affirmed the order, and on appeal the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment- of the General Term. The court, Andrews, Ch. J., writing, said (pp. 23, 24): “ W e t-hinli the construction of the act of annexation, which affirms its validity as such, but leaves the annexed territory part of the twenty-second district and of the second judicial district and department, and within the jurisdiction of the board of supervisors of Westchester county for-the purpose of forming assembly districts, most nearly harmonizes the provisions of the Constitution relating to senate, judicial and assembly districts, and the power possessed by the legislature to divide counties and towns.” - Befe'rring to this case, the Appellate Term of the first-department, in Duckworth v. Cunningham (26 Misc. Rep. 403, 404), said : “ In the case at bar the •question simply is whether tjié -first district- of the borough of' The Bronx is within the first or the second judicial department. If in. the first department this court has jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. If in the second department this court is without jupiscliction. The question has been practically decided by the Court of Appeals in People ex rel. Henderson v. Board of Supervisors (147 N. Y. 1). The effect of that decision. is that the territory now embraced within the boundaries of the first judicial district of the Municipal Court, borough of The Bronx, remains, notwithstanding its former annexation to the city and county of Hew York, part of the twenty-second senate district, and of the second judicial district .and department.”
Counsel for the respondent claims that a later decision of the Court of Appeals (Hawkins v. Pelham Electric Light Co., 158 N. Y. 417) has limited the scope of the decision in the Henderson case. *220In .th&■ Hawkins case the court said (p. 420): While it is true that in that (Henderson) case the court held that this change of the lines of the two counties, did not change the senate, assembly or judicial districts, so far at least, as to' control in' .determining the electors who should be entitled to vote for senator, assemblymen or judges of the Supreme Court, still, it distinctly held that the portion of the territory which was annexed to the county of New York'was to be considered a part of that county for other purposes.”
It is to be observed that this quotation uses the words, “ other purposes,” but this does.not necessarily include all other purposes; "and we do not find in either case any authority for the claim that the territory of the Bronx is- not within the second judicial department for the purposes of this appeal. Indeed, on principle, as the court held that the voters of the district of the Bronx were entitled to vote for the justices of the Supreme Court in the second judicial department, it is reasonable to. infer that the voters, and .all others who have the right to sue and are subject to be sued, living in that district, are entitled to have their actions at law and equity adjudicated. by the justices whom such Voters have elected. We are unwilling, therefore, to construe the Hawkins ease as overruling the Henderson, case in any respect which would require us to say that the. district of the Bronx is not a part of the second judicial department; all the moré that, by reason of the decision in the Duckworth case, the Appellate Term, in the first department, has refused to entertain appeals from the Municipal Court of the city of New York, borough of the Bronx, first district. The result of holding that the Henderson case was overruled in the respect indicated, would be to deny the .suitor in the territory in question the right of appeal to the second department, as well as to the Appellate Term in the first department.
The motion to dismiss the appeal should, therefore, be denied.
The appeal from the judgment involves a pure question of fact, on conflicting evidence. The plaintiff sued to recover the balance of a bill, the last item of which is dated December IT, 1883. The defendant set up the Statute of Limitations. The plaintiff testified that the defendant’s testator paid him twenty-five dollars on October 25,1893; and there is such an entry on the plaintiff’s books, a leaf of which is included in the return. On another bill, dated November 29, 1884, rendered by the plaintiff to the testator, appears the *221plaintiff’s receipt for twenty-five dollars, the date being “ Oct. 25, 1888.”
When the receipt was presented to him the plaintiff testified that it was in his handwriting. Afterward, but at the same examination, the attention of the court apparently was attracted to an evident difference between the chirography of the date and that of the rest of the receipt, and the court asked the witness: “ Tell me in whose handwriting that date on the defendant’s exhibit is ? A. It is my handwriting. Q. Look at the date. A. That date is not my handwriting. That is as sure as you live. I did not look, at that date business.”
In his brief the appellant’s counsel makes these questions of the court the subject of animadversion on the conduct of the justice. The strictures are utterly unfounded. The action of the justice was wholly within the line of his duty in eliciting facts, and the counsel’s citation of the provision of' the Greater Hew York charter (Laws of 1897, chap. 378) which forbids a justice of .the Municipal Court to practice as an attorney, and hence to act as counsel for either party on a trial before himself, is neither dignified nor humorous, and justly merits the reprobation of an appellate tribunal.
The court rendered judgment for one hundred and ninety-six dollars and eighty-seven cents, the amount of principal and interest, with costs, demanded in the complaint. Ho deduction was made for the twenty-five dollars mentioned in the questioned receipt, but the plaintiff’s exhibits show that there was ■ a payment of twenty-five dollars made on October 25, 1893, for which allowance was made in the prayer of the complaint.
The court, on the evidence, was justified iii finding that the twenty-five dollars named in the receipt was the same payment which appeared in the account under the date of October 25, 1893. In any event, there was a conflict of evidence, and we neither propose nor are we at liberty to interfere with a judgment rendered on a disputed question of fact.
The motion to dismiss should be denied and the judgment affirmed.
All concurred, except Jenks, J., taking no part.
Judgment of the Municipal Court affirmed, with costs.,