
    ISAAC S. WATERS, Respondent, v. EMELINE SHEPHERD, Appellant.
    
      Referee — notice by, to one party that report was ready — if within the sixty days time for making report, other party cannot therefter elect to end reference though the report is left in the referee's hands— Code of Procedure, § 273.
    Appeal from an order adjudging the report of a referee herein to have been regularly filed, and the judgment entered thereon to be regular.
    This action was tried before a referee. The case was submitted for final determination on the 14th of February, 1877. On the 26th of February, 1877, the referee made his report in favor of the plaintiff for $218.31. On the same day, the referee gave written notice to the attorneys for the plaintiff and the defendant that the report was ready for delivery, and that it was in favor of the plaintiff for $218.31. The report lay in the hands of the referee until May 2d, 1877, when the defendant served a notice in writing upon the referee and plaintiff’s attorney that she elected to end the reference. In September, 1877, the plaintiff’s attorney took the report from the referee and entered judgment upon it. Upon a motion made by plaintiff, the court at Special Term ordered the judgment to stand as regularly made.
    Upon an appeal from this order, the court at General Term said: “ This order docs not seem to conflict with the decision of .the Court of Appeals in Gregory v. Oryder (10 Abb. N. S., 289). Section 273 of the Code then in force required the referee to make and deliver his report, ■ within sixty days from the time the action was finally submitted. In Gregory v. Cryder, the Court of Appeals decided that; when a referee failed to make and deliver his report within sixty days, he lost all right to make or deliver the same after that time. In this case, it was made and delivered within the time. It was made, and the parties notified of its-terms, and tnat it could be obtained on application from him. What more should the referee do to entitle himself to receive his fees? Neither party asked for it, or objected that it should remain in the referee’s hands for them until called for. Either party could have taken up the same at any time. It was a completed thing, and beyond the power of the referee to withhold or change-it after the service of the notice. I think the order should be-affirmed, with costs and disbursements.
    
      O. W. Sandford, for the appellant.
    
      John Berry, for the respondent.
   Opinion by

Barnard, P. J.

Present — Barnard, P. J., and Dykman, J.; Gilbert, J., not sitting.

Order affirmed, with $10 costs and disbursements.  