The principal question presented involves the right of the Special Term to amend a decision of the cause, which had been made, signed and delivered, as of a prior term when the cause was tried, and also the right to change the judgment, entered in accordance with the decision as made, so that it should conform to the change made in the findings of fact and law, after they were made as required by the order appealed from. There was no evidence given upon the trial that Stewart had paid the costs to the attorneys in the action when the judgment was recovered. There was, therefore, nothing for the trial judge to act upon in separating the damages from the costs as to the right of the plaintiff to recover. Nor was there any mistake made by the trial judge in respect to the facts and law found by him upon the evidence before him, when he deliberated and decided and signed his decision. The case cited from 19 Johnson, 244 (Mechanics’ Bank v. Minthorne), differs from this one. There the clerk who made the assessment of damages upon an indorsement of a note of $7,000 made a mistake in calculating the interest one year too short, and the error of $525 was not discovered until the judgment had been paid and satisfied of record. The court, upon application, granted a provisional order to the effect that if the defendant did not pay the $525 in thirty days, then “the clerk re-assess the damages of the plaintiff,” allowing the defendant for all sums he had paid after the prior assessment. It was held to be a case of clear mistake. (Wardell v. Eden, 2 Johnson’s Cases, 121.)
There is a dictum of Sutherland, J., in Pitt v. Davison (12 Abb., 387), in a Special Term case, to the effect that the court *475has power after entry of a decree in requirement of specific performance to amend it so as to require payment of damages instead, where the proper facts exist and appeared upon the hearing, or to order a referee to ascertain the facts for the purpose of amending a decree, where it was not in accordance with the facts surrounding the parties at the time the decree was settled, and it had become impossible for the party to convey; and the judge said the decree should have recited the reason and fact of such impossibility, and in place of decreeing specific performance should have decreed compensation in damages. The judge expresses incidentally the opinion that such change could be made, and that too, upon the ground “ that it was no error of the court in point of law, but an error arising from the omission of a fact.”
The case of The N. Y. Ice Co. v. The N. W. Ins. Co., as reported in 23 N. Y., 358, has been cited by the respondent’s counsel, and as reported in 32 Barb., 534, by the appellant’s counsel. The action was brought to recover upon a policy of insurance, and to reform it, if it should be found necessary. It was tried before' Ingraham, J., at Special Term, and he held that a case for relief had not been made out, and dismissed the complaint. The plaintiff there asked to have a trial upon the policy as it stood, without reformation. This ivas refused, and he dismissed the complaint without prejudice to the right to bring a new action. The plaintiff then discovered that the time to sue was limited, and made a. motion for and obtained leave to “ serve a new complaint at law.” Upon appeal the order was reversed. (32 Barb., 534.) Bonnet, J., said: “The amendment appears to me not unreasonable or inequitable, but I do not see that the court has any power to make it. Final judgment dismissing the complaint was duly rendered and entered. And there is no allegation or pretense of any mistake or omission therein. The judgment is precisely what it was intended to be, and disposes of the whole case. The amendment has been asked for and granted upon considerations not presented to the court at the hearing, and is intended to give to the plaintiff relief not then contemplated by any one.” He then quotes Clark v. Hall (7 Paige, 382), where it was held by the Chancellor, that a decree cannot be varied in substance without a rehearing; but that it may 1x3 amended or connected on motion as to mere clerical errors, *476■or by inserting any provision or direction which would have been inserted as a matter of course, if the same had been asked for at the hearing as a necessary or proper clause to carry into effect the decision of the court. The order of the Special Term was reversed upon that opinion of Bonney, J.
An appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals, and the opinion delivered by Comstock, J., and reported 23 N. Y. (supra.) The opinion is to the effect: first, that the order is not appeal-able, and the decision is put upon that ground; second, and it also discussed the error of the judge in refusing a trial of the question of the right to recover at law, and suggests that an appeal brought from that judgment would lead to the correction of the error; third, that the amendment might have been made at the trial, and the dictum as expressed, that it could be made after judgment, and a new trial ordered in respect to the matters freshly brought into the case by the amendment.
Subsequent to the chancellor’s decision in Clark v. Hall (supra), the vice-chancellor followed it, and stated “ the rule is not to vary or alter a decree in a material part on motion or petition; a rehearing should be had for such purpose.” “ A decree cannot be varied, in substance, on petition without a rehearing.” (Ray v. Connor, 3 Eds. Chy., 504.) In Hotaling v. Marsh (14 Abb., 161), the New York General Term held, in 1862, that mistakes which may be amended under section 173 of the Code do not include judicial errors in rendering judgment. Leonard, J., said the “amendment now asked for is one that relates to the relief granted by the court on the hearing of the cause, or rather to the omission to grant the whole relief which the case would permit.” If a judicial mistake has been made, it has sometimes been corrected by vacating the judgment and rehearing the case on the merits. (Id.) Those cases were followed in Lillie v. Sherman (39 How., 288), where there was a motion made to amend the decree by directing payment to the plaintiff in gold, or its equivalent, and refused upon the ground that if there was any error in the decree it was judicial. In Hubbard v. Copcutt (9 Abb. [N. S.], 289), the Court of Appeals held that a court at Special Term cannot modify, in substance, a judgment of the General Term rendered upon a case presenting a verdict taken at Circuit subject to the *477opinion of the court at General Term, Allen, J., says: “If further evidence was necessary to settle the rights of the parties and enable a proper judgment to be pronounced, it would seem i hat a retrial would have been proper.” (p. 290), Sheldon v. Williams (52 Barb., 183), opinion by Potter, J., is to the same effect. (See Libby v. Rosekrans, 55 Barb., 215.) The case of Stevens v. Veriane (2 Lans., 90), was one where the referee in an equity action had passed upon the question of costs. Judge Mollin said: “ To alter the adjudication .as to costs, upon motion, after judgment, is to vary the judgment, and this can only be done by a court authorized to revise the judgment on appeal, or to review the cause. A judge at Special Term has no such power.” (See Beattie v. Qua, 15 Barb., 132.)
A decision had been made and signed and delivered before any" question'was made as to the item of $22.80. That decision awarded the whole money in the hands of the defendant Gallup, as sheriff, to the plaintiff, and held, likewise that Stewart had no interest in the money. The changes sought upon special motion may be proper to be made, but they relate to the merits, to the matters covered by the decision, and should be allowed only after a rehearing before the trial judge upon the case being sent back to him, or after a review by a court having power on appeal to review and overhaul the judicial conclusions had upon the evidence adduced upon the trial. Such changes in the finding.» of fact, of law and alterations of the judgment, the Special Term had no power to make.
The order made and appealed from should be reversed, with $10 costs and disbursements, and the motion denied with $10 costs of opposing, and the clerk of Monroe county directed to strike out any alterations made by him in the judgment-roll, in virtue of the order December 6th of 1877.
Talcott, P. J.,and Smith, J., concurred.Ordered accordingly.