
    Frederick Morris, Appellant, v. Leo Harburger, Respondent.
    
      Trial — the judge may not authorize the clerk to receive the verdict — a verdict so taken is void, although the parties to the action do not object.
    
    A judge-presiding at a jury trial has no power, after submitting the case to the jury, to withdraw from the trial and authorize the clerk to receive the verdict. If he does so, the" verdict and the judgment entered thereon are void, and the fact.that the parties to the action did not object to the trial judge’s disposition of the matter will not estop them from asserting such invalidity.
    Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
    Appeal by the plaintiff, Frederick Morris, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the defendant, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Hew York on the 3d day of March, 1904, upon the verdict of a jury, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 11th day of February, 1904, denying the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial made upon the minutes. ■
    
      Louis Zinke for the appellant.
    
      Marcus Newburg, for the respondent.
   Hatch, J.:

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 where the court submitted the cáse to the jury. At the close of the charge the judge stated that as he was about to leave the city he would authorize the clerk of the court to receive the verdict of the jury. ■ The parties to the action interposed no objection to this proceeding. The judge directed - the jury to write out their verdict-when they had .agreed and deliver it to the clerk, and thereupon left the city and took no further part in the trial. The jury subsequently reported to the clerk, delivered to him their verdict in a sealed envelope, the clerk opened the same and found recorded therein a verdict in favor of the defendant of no cause of action. Thereupon the clerk received and entered the same as the verdict of the jury."

, 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 Mr. Justice Kennedy. Mr. Justice Martin concurred in the conclusion reached by the court, but stated that he was not prepared to hold that the parties to an action may not, under any circumrstances, stipulate that the verdict may be received and entered by the clerk in the absence of the judge and be bound by such stipulation.” He regarded such question as unnecessary to a decision of that case, but he expressed no further opinion thereon. A like doctrine was announced in Hinman v. People (13 Hun, 266). All of these authorities and many others are reviewed in the case above cited, and in principle the conclusion reached by the court thereunder is decisive of the present case. Were the question an original one I should hesitate in holding that the parties were not estopped by consenting that the clerk receive and enter the verdict, but I regard these decisions as settling this question so far as the Supreme Court is concerned; Giving force and effect thereto, the necessary conclusion. is that the verdict and judgment in the present case are void.

. 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. -  