(dissenting). The question to be determined on this appeal is whether the previous order of the Supreme Court which approved the report of the official referee, from which no appeal was taken, is void for want of jurisdiction of the subject-matter, so that it might have been treated as non-existent by the parties and must now be disregarded as a nullity by the court. Section 20 of the Debtor and Creditor Law provides, in substance, *671that an order entered in such proceedings shall have the same effect as a final judgment of the Supreme Court:
“ General powers of court. Any proceeding under this article shall be deemed for all purposes, including review by appeal or otherwise, to be a proceeding had in the court as a court of general jurisdiction, and the court shall have full jurisdiction to do all and every act relating to the assigned estate, the assignees, assignors and creditors, and jurisdiction shall be presumed in support of the orders and decrees therein unless the contrary be shown; and after the filing or recording of an assignment under this article, the court may exercise the powers of a court of equity in reference to the trust and any matters involved therein.”
The question, then, is whether the final order of the Supreme Court, vested with general jurisdiction over the assigned estate and with jurisdiction over the parties, is void because, with the implied consent of all these parties, it directed that the referee appointed to conduct the examination of the defendant should determine also the validity of the assignee’s claim. The consent was manifested not only by the conduct of the parties in proceeding before the referee without objection, in accordance with the order which referred to him the determination of the claim, but by their failure to appeal from the final order which confirmed his report. Surely, if the court, upon stipulation of the parties, bad made the order of reference directing that the validity of the claim be determined before this referee, it could not be contended that the proceedings, and in particular the final order confirming his report, were beyond the jurisdiction of the court. (15 C. J. 807.) When it is stated that jurisdiction over the subject-matter cannot be conferred by consent, it is meant that parties cannot, by their agreement, authorize a court to enter a judgment which by the law of its creation it has no power to make. (Matter of Walker, 136 N. Y. 20.) But that principle seems to me entirely inapplicable where the judgment or final order is that of a court with power to make precisely such a judgment or order (1 Freeman on Judgments, § 364) and the only possible question concerns the regularity of the proceedings which resulted therein. (Rosenblum v. Higgins, 240 App. Div. 131; affd., 265 N. Y. 472; Dwight v. St. John, 25 id. 203.) All such questions are within the control of the parties and relief against any procedure which is detrimental to the rights of either is by appeal. (Bangs v. Duckinfield, 18 N. Y. 592, 597.)
Bannon v. Bannon (270 N. Y. 484) bolds nothing to the contrary. It was there decided that an intermediate order could not be made, the basis of a plea of res adjudícala and that to be available for that purpose the earlier proceedings, whatever their form, must have *672contemplated a final determination of the issue. That requirement is fully met in the present case.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Glennon, J., concurs.
Order and judgment reversed, with costs, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.