This action was brought to recover damages for a breach of contract in failing to pay into a partnership established between the plaintiff "and a son-in-law of the defendant the sum of $10,000 as a part of the capital of the firm. The trial proceeded to a point
, It is claimed by the appellant that the direction of the court that the clerk receive the verdict was unlawful and that the judgment-entered thereon is void. Such claim seems to find conclusive support in the decisions of the Supreme Court of this State. In French v. Merrill (27 App. Div. 612) it was held that a verdict received by , a justice of the Appellate Division after a trial before another justice, even though it was done by consent of all the parties, was illegal, and that the verdict and the judgment entered thereon were void. This proceeded not alone upon the ground that the Constitution of the State (Art. 6, § 2) disqualified a judge sitting in the Appellate Division from presiding at a trial, but also upon the ground that the verdict was an essential and important part of the trial and that the judge presiding- could not delegate a person not authorized by law To receive it; that the parties to the action did not estop themselves, from raising the question by their consent that the verdict be so received, for the reason that the effect of such act was to substitute a creation of their own for the court; that as it affected the public and destroyed the constitution of the court, it was wholly void and waiver or estoppel could not be predicated thereon. In Ingersoll v. Town of Lansing (51 Hun, 101) it was held, under circumstances quite similar to the case now before us, that the court could not abandon the trial and authorize the clerk to receive the verdict of the jury; that' the consent of the parties did not cure such error, as it was a part of the trial, and as such could not be delegated by the court to the clerk, even by consent. The opinion in that case was written by Mr. Justice Follett and concurred in by
. The judgment and order should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
O’Brien, Ingraham - and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. -