
    Bernard Schmidt, Appellant, v. William Livingston et al., Defendants, and John G. Schwartz, Surety, Respondent.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    May, 1897.)
    1. Appeal — Contention based on opinion cannot be considered!.
    An appellate court cannot consider a contention based wholly on the opinion of the court below, as such opinion forms no part of the record.
    2. Same — Must be decided on its own records
    Each appeal must be considered separately upon its own record and determined upon the papers which were before the court when the decision appealed from was made.
    
      3. Same — Order denying reargument.
    An order of the General Term of the City Court of New York denying a motion for reargument is a purely discretionary decision and is not reviewable by the Appellate Term.
    4. Contempt — False swearing of surety — Burden of proof.
    In a proceeding to punish a surety for contempt for false swearing as to his property on justification, the burden of proof rests upon the plaintiff and is not shifted by an attack upon his evidence made by the defendant in denial of the charge.
    Schmidt v. Livingston, 19 Mise. Rep. 353, affirmed.
    Appeal by the plaintiff from a reversal by the General Term of the City Court of an order of the Special Term adjudging guilty of contempt John G. Schwartz, surety upon bail, for alleged misconduct in swearing to his sufficiency as such surety. Appeal also by plaintiff from an order of the General Term denying a motion for a reargument of the appeal from the said order of the Special Term.
    Ten Eyck & Remington, for appellant.
    Albert I. Sire, for respondent.
   Daly, P. J.

The deposition of the surety, Schwartz, taken upon the examination as to his sufficiency, contained a statement that he had no debts nor outstanding obligations, except a bond or undertaking on which his liability was less than $500. It appeared from his subsequent examination as a judgment debtor, when it was sought to enforce his liability as surety, that when,he swore to the deposition in question he owed his wife $5,000, and his sister-in-law $1,000, evidenced in part by notes. The defense of the surety is that he had disclosed this indebtedness, when examined as to his sufficiency, but that the examining counsel had not taken down his statements in that regard, nor referred to them in the deposition. This was disputed by the counsel and an issue of fact was thus presented which the learned justice at Special Term decided against the surety, but' which the General Term on appeal resolved in his favor. As the order of reversal fails to show that the decision - was based upon any question of law, we are to assume that it was upon facts, and with this determination of the City Court upon the- facts we will not interfere. Buell v. Hollins, 16 Misc. Rep. 551.

It is claimed by the appellant that it appears by the opinion' of the General Term that its decision was based upon an erroneous view of the law. respecting the burden of proof upon the motion, the court saying that the onus was upon the plaintiff to: establish ■ the falsity of the surety’s statement at the time of his examination-by a preponderance of evidence; whereas it is claimed by appellant the burden of proof was upon the surety to establish by a' preponderance of evidence that the deposition signed and sworn to by him did not contain the whole of his examination. As this contention is based wholly upon, the opinion, which is no part of. the record upon the appeal from the order of reversal, we cannot consider it;- but appellant claims that he has overcome the difficulty by moving for a réargument, in the City Court based upon the opinion and by appealing to this court from the denial of his. motion-for such reargument and presenting the record of which the opinion forms a part. This is unavailing. Each appeal must be considered separately upon its own record and determined by us upon the papers which" were before the court when the decision appealed from was.made. The appeal from the order refusing a reargument must be dismissed as- such a purely discretionary decision cannot be reviewed by us; and the record of the principal appeal is left where it would be if none of the papers on the motion for reargument had been printed. The order reversing the Special Term does not refer to the opinion; so it cannot be considered on the appeal from such order.

Where the question presented to us, we should have no hesitation in agreeing with the General Term that the onus.was upon the plaintiff to .establish the charge of false swearing on the part of the surety. His written examination upon justification and his written examination in supplementary proceedings furnish plaintiff’s evidence in support of the charge of perjury. . In denying the charge, he asserts that all of his statements were not taken down at the time of the justification, and that he swore to the paper believing that it contained all that was necessary to be stated. The burden rested upon the plaintiff, in the first place, to establish the charge of false swearing and was not shifted by the attack upon his evidence made by the respondent in denial of the charge. A prima facie case was made out by the two depositions of the surety,- but the issue remained the same, and no affirmative issue was tendered by the defendant in assailing the accuracy of completeness of the writings, and the onus of proving the charge remained throughout with the plaintiff.

The order of the Special Term affirmed, with costs; the appeal, from the order denying the motion for reargument dismissed with $10 costs.

. McAdam and Bischoff, JJ., concur.

Order affirmed, with costs and disbursements. Appeal from order denying reargumenf dismissed, with $10 costs and'disbursements.  