Study aid, not legal advice. caselaw is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice or engage in the unauthorized practice of law (UPL). All briefs, outlines, and citation tools on these pages are educational summaries for law students; they are not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney admitted in your jurisdiction. Bar-admission rules vary by state. For court filings or client matters, verify every authority against the official reporter and your court's local rules. Use of caselaw does not create an attorney-client relationship.
William E. Dodge Stokes, Respondent, v. Anson Phelps Stokes et al., Defendants, et al., Appellants, 1891 — 128 N.Y. 615 · caselaw · US
General
William E. Dodge Stokes, Respondent, v. Anson Phelps Stokes et al., Defendants, et al., Appellants
128 N.Y. 615·New York Court of Appeals·1891·NY
Brief incoming
Hand-reviewed Bluebook brief (procedural posture, facts, issue, holding, reasoning, dissent) ships once the AI generation pipeline runs through this case. Join the waitlist to get notified when 1L briefs go live.
Opinion
William E. Dodge Stokes, Respondent, v. Anson Phelps Stokes et al., Defendants, et al., Appellants.
(Argued June 15, 1891;
decided June 25, 1891.)
Appeal from order of the General Term of the Supreme Court in the first judicial department, made February 11,1891, which affirmed an order of Special Term overruling a demurrer to the complaint, and affirmed an interlocutory judgment in favor of plaintiff entered thereon.
Edward W. Sheldon for appellants.
George Richards for respondent.
[MAJORITY]
Agree to affirm; no opinion.
All concur.
Order affirmed.