This case differs from Fairman v. Brush, (Sup.) 15 N. Y. Supp. 44, and Schultheis v. McInerny, (Sup.) 13 N. Y. Supp. 684, in the fact that here the .referee-has. decided the question sought to be reconsidéred, and the object of recommitting the report, is to induce him to change his decision. ■ In Fairman v. Brush we ;held,; following Schultheis v. Mclnerny, that the court had power to require a referee to make his findings sufficiently definite to raise .the question presented upon the appeal. But this was all we decided. We did not question the well-settled rule that a referee had no power to alter his report after he has signed and delivered. it. The real question here is whether the referee had such power, after signing his report, and notifying the parties thereof, but before delivering or filing it. We think not. In Ayrault v. Sackett, 17 How. Pr. 509, it was held that “signing the report, together with notice of the fact to the party entitled to it, are the definí-, tive acts which close his [the referee’s] judicial authority in the case; or, rather, they are the acts which preclude his opening the case for further evidence or consideration..” The court there added that the controlling circumsiance was “that the case remains in his [the referee’s]hands until the report is made and signed, and the parties, or the one entitled to the report, is duly notified of it.” This case was followed in Kissam v. Hamilton, 20 How. Pr. 376, where the,court held that “the case is not decided until the report is signed.. Until then they [the referees] may open it for further evidence, reconsider and change their conclusions.” The same rule was laid down in Quackenbush v. Johnson, 55 How. Pr. 96, and in Waters v. Shepherd, 14 Hun, 223. Tn Quackenbush v. Johnson it was held that after' the referee has made and signed his report, and notified the party entitled to it, his duty as a *242referee is ended. "He had no power thereafter,” said Noxon, J., “to amend or alter his report.” In Waters v. Shepherd the report was made, and the parties notified of its terms. Upon this the court observed: “It was a completed thing, and beyond the power of the referee to withhold or change it, after the service of the notice.” The question as to when the case is actually decided should not be confused with questions relating to the termination of the reference for failure to deliver or file the report within 60 days after the cause is finally submitted. It is now settled that, to prevent the termination of a reference by notice under section 1019 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the report must be actually delivered to the attorney of one of the parties, or filed with the clerk within the limited period. Little v. Lynch, 99 N. Y. 112, 1 N. E. Rep. 312. But this has nothing to do with the question as to when the judicial function ceases. That occurs when the referee has actually decided the case, signed the report embodying such decision, and notified the parties thereof. It is thus that the decision is “rendered,” within the meaning of section 10231 of the Code of Civil Procedure. If the “decision” is not “rendered” until the report is actually taken up (that is, delivered) or filed, what becomes of the provision contained in section 1023, that findings must be submitted before the decision or report is rendered? It surely was not the intention to permit such findings to be submitted after the referee has announced his judgment. We think the decision is rendered when such judgment (embodied in a report duly signed) is announced. Certain consequences flow from the failure to deliver or file the report, but neglect in that respect does not, while it continues, keep the judicial' function in abeyance.
In the present ease there was no clerical error, technical omission, or inadvertence. The defendant’s counsel, in his brief submitted to the referee, asked for costs, yet the report" concludes that the complaint should be dismissed without costs. When the defendant’s attorney observed this, he paused, as he was about to take up the report, and expressed a desire to be heard on the question of costs. The referee then certified that he desired to hear counsel upon that subject, and to make such change or modification with regard to costs as might seem proper to him after hearing argument. He did not act inadvertently, however; for the defendant’s attorney tells us that the decision disallowing costs was because the referee “ did not think the question one of practical importance.” It appears, also, that thé referee furnished the plaintiff’s attorney with a copy of the report, unsigned, and returned the plaintiff’s proposed findings, passed upon as required by law. Upon these facts the case is brought fully within the principle of Bank v. Levy, 41 Hun, 462, where an order was reversed which remitted a report to enable the referee to supply an inadvertent omission to award costs. While it is *243not necessary for us to go to this extreme length, we think it entirely clear that where the judicial function has once been fully exercised the referee should not be reinvested with such function for the purpose of more deliberately reconsidering questions already passed upon and decided. The order appealed from should therefore be reversed, with $10 costs and the usual disbursements, and the motion to recommit denied. All concur.
The section provides that “before the cause is finally submitted to the court or the referee, or within such time afterwards, and before the decision or report is rendered, as the court or referee allows, the attorney for either party may submit, in writing, a statement of the facts which he deems established by the evidence, and of the rulings upon questions of law which he desires the court or the referee to make, ” etc.