Case Name: Edward A. Morrison, Respondent, v. The Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company and The Manhattan Railway Company, Appellants
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1901
Citations: 60 A.D. 180
Docket Number: 
Parties: Edward A. Morrison, Respondent, v. The Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company and The Manhattan Railway Company, Appellants.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 60
Pages: 180–184

Head Matter:
Edward A. Morrison, Respondent, v. The Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company and The Manhattan Railway Company, Appellants.
Judgment and decision—errors 'therein as to the description of the property for which damages a/re allowed, held- to be clerical only and subject to correction by motion.
The complaint in an abutter’s' action against an elevated railway company described the premises as situated on the corner of Sixth avenue and Forty-first street, in the city of New York, having a frontage on Sixth avenue of about forty-three feet and eight inches and a depth of one hundred feet, and being known by the street numbers 719 and 721 Sixth avenue. Upon the trial it appeared that the plaintiff owned three houses at that place, known, respectively, as 719 and 721 Sixth avenue and 103 West Forty-first street; 719 and 721 Sixth avenue had a frontage of forty-three feet and nine and one-half inches on Sixth avenue and extended back seventy feet on Forty-first street; 103 West Forty-first street was thirty feet wide on the street and forty-three feet and nine and one-half inches deep and was located in the rear of the Sixth avenue houses. The plaintiff made no claim for damages to the Forty-first street house, and the evidence was such that the court would have no difficulty in finding the amount of damage done to the Sixth avenue houses, notwithstanding that it appeared that the Forty-first street house was rented in connection with No. 721 ■ Sixth avenue.
The decision referred in terms to the premises described in the complaint without specifying particularly of what those premises consisted or saying anything about the size of them. The judgment entered upon the decision conformed practically to it except that it described the premises as extending along Forty-first street one hundred feet, “being the premises now known by the street numbers 719 and 721 Sixth avenue.”
Held, that the court at a Special Term, presided over by the judge who tried the case, had power, under section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to amend the decision and judgment by striking out after the word “premises’’ the words “ described in the complaint ” wherever they occurred and by inserting the words “known as Nos. 719 and 721 Sixth avenue,” and to amend the judg. ment by striking out the words “ one hundred feet” and substituting therefor “ seventy feet.; ”
That the error intended to be corrected by the amendment was a clerical and not a judicial error.
Van Brunt, P. J., dissented,
Appeal by the defendants, The Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company and another, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the New York Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 11th day of December, 1900, resettling the decision and-judgment entered in the action.
Arthur C. Townsend, for the appellants.
Stanley W. Dexter, for the respondent.

Opinion:
Rumsey, J.:
• This is the usual action against an elevated railroad company for an injunction and damages to the plaintiff's premises. Those premises were described in the complaint as situated on the westerly side of Sixth avenue, at the northwest corner of Forty-first street, having a frontage on Sixth avenue of about forty-three feet and eight inches, and a depth of one hundred feet, and being known by the street numbers 719 and 721 Sixth avenue. Upon the trial it appeared that the plaintiff owned three houses at that place. Two of them were known as 719 and 721 Sixth avenue. The lots upon which these houses were situated had a frontage of forty-three feet nine and a half inches on Sixth avenue, and extended back along on Forty-first street for seventy feet. Back of these houses on Forty-first street was ánother house known as 103 West Forty-first street. The lot on which that house was built was thirty feet on the street and forty-three feet nine and a half inches deep. It consisted of the rear or easterly thirty feet of lots 719 and 721 Sixth avenue.
At the trial, after this situation had been made to appear, the counsel for the plaintiff stated that he made no claim for damages to the building No. 103 West Forty-first street. The case continued after that announcement was made, and no proof was given as to the value of that lot, but the proof was confined to the value of the two lots on Sixth avenue. So far as the rental value is concerned, it was shown that the house upon lot 719 had been rented by itself. No. 721 was built on the corner of Sixth avenue and Forty-first street, and that building seems to have been rented in connection with the building at the rear known as No. 103 West1 Forty-first street, but the tabulated statement of the rents in the ease shows that the rental value of the house No.- 721 Sixth avenue was given separately from the rents received for the building on 103 West Forty-first street, so that the court could have had no difficulty in ascertaining the exact amount of rents received from time to time on building No: 721, without confusing them with the rents received for the lot facing on Forty-first street. When the decision came to be made, it was in terms confined to the premises described in the complaint 'without specifying particularly what those premises consisted of, or saying anything about the size of them; The judgment entered upon the decision conformed practically to it, except that the description of the premises inserted in the judgment described them as extending along the northerly side of Forty-first street 100 feet to the place of beginning, "being the premises now known by the street numbers 719 and 721 Sixth avenue." Upon appeal to this court it was claimed that the court erred in allowing damages for the diminution in the rental and fee values of the lot known as 103 West Forty-first street, although it was claimed by the plaintiff that no allowance was made for that lot. Thereupon a motion was made to correct and resettle the decision and judgment by striking out after-the word "premises" the words "described in the complaint " wherever they occurred- and inserting the words " known as-Nos. 719 and 721 Sixth avenue " and. amending the judgment by striking out the words "one hundred feet" and substituting " seventy feet." This was done at a Special Term held by the same justice before whom the case was originally decided, and the appeal is taken from his order, thus settling the decision and judgment.
The question before us is not complicated by any question of practice arising out of the fact that the record has been filed in this court, but it may be determined as though the motion had been made at the Special Term before the appeal had been taken to us. Only two questions "are presented. In the first place what was the nature of the change made ? Was it a correction of a judicial error -committed by the court, or did it simply operate to correct a clerical error to establish the decision precisely as it was intended to be made by the court Í A majority of the court think that it was a mere clerical error. Although the premises are described in the complaint as having a depth of 100 feet yet they are also described .as the premises known as Nos. 719 and 721 Sixth avenue, and it is quite evident from the complaint that that was the distinguishing mark of the premises. There is no dispute that at the opening of the case the plaintiff, who was the first witness, and who described the premises, stated in terms that upon lots Nos. 719 and 721 there stood two brick houses fifty-five feet deep, covering the entire frontage of the lots, and expressly stated that back of these houses were the premises known as 103 West Forty-first street, which were thirty feet wide and extended forty-three feet nine and one-half inches clear across the width of the two lots fronting on Sixth avenue. It is impossible that there could have been any misunderstanding as to the relative situation of these lots or as to the size of Nos. 719 and 721 Sixth avenue. When we add to this the fact that the plaintiff upon the trial expressly disclaimed any claim for the premises 103 West Forty-first street, it must be quite clear that the learned justice below gave no damages for any other property than that contained in the two lots known as Nos. 719 and 721 Sixth avenue, which were the subject of the litigation.
There, can be no presumption that the justice below overlooked the disclaimer made by the plaintiff's counsel as soon as the exact size and situation of these two lots appeared, and it is very evident from the course of the trial after the disclaimer was made that the property as to which testimony was given was that known as 719 rand 721 Sixth avenue. There is always a presumption that the order appealed from is correct. Where the order turns, as it does .in this case, very largely upon the personal knowledge of the learned justice who makes it, and who of course must have known what he intended by his decision, it seems to me that that presumption is almost irresistible. There is nothing in the order appealed from which is in the slightest degree inconsistent with the complaint or the decision, because it is quite apparent that the principal means of distinguishing the property which was the subject of the action is by the street numbers, and in this case, as ordinarily, the statement of the depth of the lots is a matter which is of little weight in establishing the location, and is only important as an incident in getting ¡at its value.
By' section 123 of the Code of Civil Procedure the court is authorized to correct a mistake in any respect in the papers or proceedings. ' That authority is limited .by the rulé' that where the error is the result of an incorrect finding on the'part'of the court/ either as to a question of fact upon the evidéncé or an-erroneous, conclusion from the facts which was intended to be made,' the error can only be corrected upon appeal. (Stannard v. Hubbell, 123 N. Y. 520.) But where the supposed error is not in fact an error, but is a mere mistake in the statement of what was intended to be decided, it is merely clerical, and the court is authorized at any stagé of the proceedings to correct it. That seems to us to be the case here, and, therefore, the order was correct and should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
O'Brien, Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented. ,