This was a creditor's action brought to set aside a transfer of personal property from the judgment debtor to the appellants, and the substantial issue was a question of fraud. After hearing witnesses on both sides, the Special Term filed a decision in two sentences, the first of which stated the nature of the action and the second was in these words: "The defendants Caywood and Donovan are entitled *Page 262 to judgment dismissing the complaint, but without costs." Without filing any exception to this decision, the plaintiff appealed from the judgment entered thereon to the Appellate Division, which not only reversed said judgment "upon questions of fact and of law," but directed final judgment for the plaintiff, setting aside the transfer as fraudulent, requiring the defendants to account for the property covered thereby, appointing a referee to ascertain and report the value thereof, and authorizing the plaintiff upon the coming in of the report to apply at Special Term for further judgment. An interlocutory judgment was entered accordingly, and, when the report of the referee came in, the Special Term confirmed the same, and thereupon final judgment was entered. The defendants appealed to this court from the final judgment, and gave notice of their intention to also review the interlocutory judgment and the order of the Special Term confirming the report of the referee.
The Appellate Division, upon reversing a judgment of the trial court where there was an issue of fact, cannot render final judgment in favor of the appellant, but must grant a new trial unless the facts are conceded, or are established by written instruments, or are found in full by the trial judge, or the evidence is not only undisputed but diverse inferences cannot be drawn therefrom, and it is manifest that no evidence can be produced which will entitle the respondent to recover. (Heller v. Cohen, 154 N.Y. 299, 305; Benedict v. Arnoux, 154 N.Y. 715,724; Snyder v. Seaman, 157 N.Y. 449, 453; New v.Village of New Rochelle, 158 N.Y. 41.) There was a question of fact in this case which did not depend upon documentary evidence, but on conflicting oral testimony. The facts were not found by the trial court, and it is obvious that further evidence relating to the question of fraud might be produced upon a new trial. The judgment of the Appellate Division, therefore, must in any event be so modified as to strike out the part which granted affirmative relief, and, unless that court had power to review the decision of the trial justice, although it was not excepted to, its judgment must be *Page 263 wholly reversed and that of the Special Term affirmed, for the exceptions taken during the progress of the trial are not entitled to serious consideration.
The decision of the trial justice did not "state separately the facts found and the conclusions of law," nor did it state "concisely the grounds upon which the issues" were "decided," as permitted by section 1022 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Neither the facts nor the grounds of the decision are stated, but merely the nature of the action and the direction for judgment. The judgment entered simply dismissed the complaint, without stating that it was rendered upon the merits, and, as it does not prevent a new action for the relief demanded, is in the nature of a nonsuit. (Code Civ. Pro. § 1209.) The decision seems to be that authorized by section 1021, which states that "the decision of the court, or the report of a referee, upon the trial of a demurrer, or upon the trial of the issues of fact or law, where a nonsuit is granted, must direct the final or interlocutory judgment to be entered thereupon, and in any such case it shall not be necessary for the court or referee to make findings of fact." Although the action was tried upon the merits, witnesses were called on either side, both parties rested, the trial court reserved its decision and wrote an opinion, still the form of the decision and the judgment entered thereon indicate that the issues were not decided upon the merits but that a nonsuit was granted.
But whether the decision was made under section 1021 or 1022 we think that an exception thereto was necessary, in order to enable the Appellate Division to reverse the judgment of the trial court. In 1894 the short form of decision was introduced, and by the same statute which authorized this new method of deciding causes, a new method of getting the case in shape to review was also provided. (L. 1894, ch. 688, § 3.) By the same section a new kind of decision and a new kind of exception to such a decision was authorized, which is independent of that permitted by section 992 or 994, and we have held that the remedy thus provided is exclusive. (Otten v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 150 N.Y. 395, 400.) *Page 264
If, however, the decision was made under section 1021 no facts were found, and the court is presumed to have held that the evidence, when every permissible inference was drawn therefrom in favor of the plaintiff, did not warrant a judgment for any part of the relief demanded in the complaint. The decision, therefore, was a ruling upon a question of law made after the cause was finally submitted, and according to the sections last cited an exception must be taken thereto in order to present the question to a court of review.
The plaintiff, however, claims that the defendants, by neglecting when before the Appellate Division to specifically raise the objection that no exception had been filed, waived their right to insist upon the defect in this court. The defendants in their brief below called the attention of the court to the fact that "there were no exceptions to the decision of the court and no requests to find." They did not make that fact the subject of a distinct point or make the specific claim that the court had no jurisdiction to review the decision of the trial judge. After discussing the exceptions relating to evidence they stated that the sole question in the case was whether the vendee knew that the vendor intended to defraud her creditors. This was the sole question on the merits, but not the sole question on the appeal, for the defendants had already made a separate point insisting that the exceptions relating to rulings upon the trial were not well taken. There was no reason for alluding to the fact that no exception had been filed to the decision of the court, unless the defendants regarded it as material upon the appeal and wished to insist upon it. Waiver depends upon intention, and we do not think the defendants intended to waive a defect to which they specifically directed the attention of the court, (Cohn v.Goldman, 76 N.Y. 284, 287; Aldridge v. Aldridge, 120 N.Y. 614. ) In thus discussing the question of waiver upon the theory of the respondent, we do not wish to be understood as holding by implication that a waiver may be implied from the failure to raise the point upon the intermediate appeal.
The Appellate Division states in its amended decision that *Page 265 it reversed upon the facts as well as the law, but as a nonsuit was granted no facts were found which could be reversed. If the direction for judgment made by the trial justice, which was a conclusion of law, had been excepted to, the exception would have raised the question whether any reasonable view of the evidence would warrant a recovery by the plaintiff. As no such exception was filed the plaintiff stood before the Appellate Division and now stands before us in the attitude of acquiescing in the decision made by the trial justice. (Hecla Powder Co. v. SiguaIron Co., 157 N.Y. 437, 441.) The record presents no exception which authorized the Appellate Division to reverse the judgment of the trial court, and we are, therefore, compelled to reverse the judgment appealed from and affirm the judgment rendered in the first instance, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, BARTLETT, HAIGHT and MARTIN, JJ., concur. LANDON, J., dissents.
Judgment reversed, etc.