
    Dena Reichenberg, Appellant, v. The Interurban Street Railway Co., Respondent.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    November, 1904.)
    Appeal from order correcting judgment for defendant which was granted on plaintiff’s motion.
    Where a judgment for defendant is, on plaintiff’s motion, corrected to read: “Complaint dismissed for failure of proof”, the plaintiff cannot subsequently appeal from such corrected judgment as it was made on her own motion and enables her to begin another action for the same cause.
    Appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment, as corrected by an order, made in the Municipal Court of the city of Mew York, tenth district, borough of Manhattan.
    
      I. Henry Harris, for appellant.
    Henry W. Goddard and William E. Weaver, for respondent.
   Freedman, P. J.

This ease was submitted to the justice for decision as of May 11, 1904, and on May 16, 1904, he rendered judgment for the defendant.

On May 19, 1904, the plaintiff served the defendant with an order to show cause issued by the said justice and returnable May 23, 1904, requiring the defendant, to show cause why the judgment rendered herein' should not be amended and corrected to read, “ Complaint dismissed for failure of proof,” and it was annexed in the moving affidavit to said order to show cause that the judgment for defendant ” had been entered through inadvertence, and that it was the intention of the trial justice “not to give a judgment for the defendant on the merits, but that he did not believe it had shown facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that his intention was to dismiss the complaint, not on the merits, but because a cause of action had not been proven.”

It does not appear that there was any opposition to this motion. An order was, therefore, entered which recites “ that it is ordered that the said motion be and the same hereby is in all respects granted and the judgment corrected so as to read instead of ‘ judgment for the defendant ’ ‘ complaint- dismissed,’ upon the ground and for the reason that the decision made was inadvertent,' in that it was not-intended to conclude the plaintiff.”

The notice of appeal herein states that the plaintiff “ appeals from the judgment entered in the office of the Clerk of the above entitled court on May 16th, 1904, in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff, and from the judgment as amended and corrected by order of Justice Murray, signed on June 2nd, 1904, which reads ‘ Complaint Dis-messed,’ etc.”

This appeal must be regarded as an appeal from the judgment as amended and corrected by the order aforesaid, as such judgment supersedes and takes the place of the first judgment _ entered.

The judgment thus appealed from is one amended and corrected and entered upon plaintiff’s own motion, is for her own benefit, and it enables her to begin another action for the same cause, and in such a case the plaintiff has no right of appeal. Hooper v. McCulloch, 109 N. Y. 609; Marvin v. Marvin, 11 Abb. (N. S.) 97; Grunberg v. Blumenlahl, 66 How. Pr. 62.

Bischoff and Fitzgerald, JJ., concur.

Appeal dismissed, with costs.  