This action was brought to obtain a judicial settlement of the accounts of the plaintiff as assignee for the benefit of creditors. After answers, the cause was on the Special Term calendar, Part 3,
The main question here is one of practice, the insistence being' that as the case had been before the judge in Part 3, he was the only one who could make the order. The stipulation of the attorneys required that the order should be made by the court, and while seemingly the better practice is to have the order of reference made by the same judge who presided in the part wdiere the case regularly came on for trial and was marked referred, this was not fatal to the order. The stipulation in terms did not provide for an appointment by any particular judge, but provided that in case of disagreement the appointment should be made by the court, which was finally done. Some of the objections to the form of the order should be sustained. Where an accounting in the Supreme Court is substituted for one under the Assignment Act, it is proper that the same rules providing for advertising for claims and notice to creditors should be followed, The provision that the hearing could be brought on upon eight days’ notice is improper for the reason that, there being an issue to be tried, the Code provides for fourteen days’ notice of trial of such an issue.
The further recital in the order that notice of such first hearing shall be given to the defendants or their attorneys, “ which notice shall be deemed sufficient for the reason that the defendant May S. Earle claims to own by assignment all of the claims against the said assigned estate,” etc., should be stricken out. This is a mere assertion of a claim, and is one of the matters to be disposed of upon a reference.
The order should be modified accordingly by striking out the ' provisions referred to, without costs.
Patterson, Ingraham ana McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.