Austin v. . Vrooman

28 N.E. 477, 128 N.Y. 229, 40 N.Y. St. Rep. 338, 83 Sickels 229, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 976
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 477 (Austin v. . Vrooman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. . Vrooman, 28 N.E. 477, 128 N.Y. 229, 40 N.Y. St. Rep. 338, 83 Sickels 229, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 976 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The defendant Chase was a justice of the peace in Jefferson county, and the defendant Vrooman, in August, 1887, appeared before him and made a sworn complaint against the above plaintiff, charging that he supplied to a certain butter manufactory diluted milk, etc. The justice issued a warrant for the arrest of the plaintiff upon such complaint, and he was thereupon arrested and brought before the justice. The offense charged against the plaintiff was a violation of chapter 183 of the Laws of 1885, which was a misdemeanor. The plaintiff, when arraigned before the justice, pleaded not guilty. The district attorney appeared for the People. The record shows that the plaintiff waived a preliminary examination and offered to give bail for his appearance at the next grand jury of Jefferson county. The justice overruled the offer. The plaintiff then demanded a jury, which was summoned, the case was tried and the plaintiff found guilty and sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and to be imprisoned until it was paid, not to exceed ninety days. He ivas thereupon taken by a constable to the county jail and was there in confinement from early in the morning until some time in the afternoon, when ins counsel procured his discharge. The ease was taken to the Court of Sessions of Jefferson county, where the conviction was affirmed, but upon appeal to the General Term of the Supreme Court, it was reversed and the plaintiff discharged, upon the ground that after the plaintiff had offered to give bail to the grand jury, the justice should have accepted it, and that he erred in then deciding to *234 try the plaintiff. The plaintiff commenced this action for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution, and upon the trial he abandoned the latter ground and sought to recover for the false imprisonment.

Upon these facts the trial court nonsuited the plaintiff and upon appeal the judgment of nonsuit was set aside and a new trial granted by the General Term, and from the order granting the new trial the defendants appeal here, giving the usual stipulation for judgment absolute in case the order be affirmed. The plaintiff contends that- upon his arraignment he had the option to submit to a trial before the justice, or to demand a trial by jury after indictment, and if he chose the latter it was the dnty of the justice to hold him to answer the charge before a court having the authority to inquire by a grand jury in regard to the alleged offense. Having elected, as he says, to-give bail, the justice was bound to accept it if sufficient, and he had no longer any jurisdiction over the subject-matter or over the plaintiff’s person, and the proceedings of the justice were thereafter wholly without jurisdiction, and he and all else concerned therein were liable in damages to the plaintiff.

The right of the justice to proceed depends upon the construction given to the statute of 1885 above mentioned. If that statute gave exclusive jurisdiction to a Court of Special Sessions to try alleged offenders against its provisions, then the justice was right in his decision to try the plaintiff, notwithstanding his demand to be held to bail to the next grand jury.

Section 14 of the act provides that “ Courts of Special Sessions shall have jurisdiction of all cases arising under this act, and their jurisdiction is hereby extended so as to enable them to enforce the penalties imposed by any or all sections thereof.” The proper construction to be given this section is not now an open question. In People v. Harris (123 N. Y. 70) we have held that exclusive jurisdiction was not conferred upon Courts of Special Sessions by such language. This decision had not been made when the justice proceeded to try the plaintiff. As the statute did not confer this exclu *235 give jurisdiction upon Courts of Special Sessions, the justice was bound by the provisions of section 211 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which directs the magistrate, when the person accused is brought before him, to inform him of his right to be tried by a jury after indictment, and in case he shall elect to be so tried the magistrate can only hold him to answer to a court having authority to inquire, by the intervention of a grand jury, into offenses triable in the county.

We think the plaintiff complied in substance with the provisions of that section when he pleaded not guilty and waived preliminary examination and offered to give bail for his appearance at the next grand jury of Jefferson county. There can be no room for any doubt that the plaintiff did by this language ask to be tided by a jury after indictment. It was the duty, therefore, of the justice to have taken bail and proceeded no-further.

In trying the plaintiff, and, upon his conviction, committing him to prison, has the justice rendered himself liable in damages to the plaintiff ? He did erroneously decide that he had the right to try the plaintiff, notwithstanding his demand, but has such erroneous decision rendered him as to all future acts a trespasser ? The answer depends upon a matter of jurisdiction. It is not a question of jurisdiction to proceed with the trial, notwithstanding the demand, but it is a question of jurisdiction to decide whether he has. or has not that right. Manifestly he does not, as a matter of law, acquire jurisdiction to proceed by deciding that he has it, but, being confronted with the question of jurisdiction, has he the power to decide it so far that his erroneous decision that he has it, exempts him from liability on the ground that he has only made a judicial error or an error of judgment upon a question of law which he was bound to decide ?

In such a case as this it must be remembered that the justice had, in the first instance at all events, jurisdiction of the subject-matter, viz.: The inquiry into alleged offenses against the provisions of this act, and the trial of alleged offenders. He also had jurisdiction of the person of the plaintiff. Full juris *236 diction had thus been confided to the justice over subject-matter and person at the time when the plaintiff was arraigned before him. In the absence of a proper demand and the giving of sufficient bail it was the duty of the justice, and his jurisdiction continued, to try the accused. This would seem to be a case where, jurisdiction having thus attached, the decision of the justice to try the plaintiff was only an erroneous exercise of such jurisdiction. It is unlike the case where jurisdiction has never been conferred, and the justice decides to exercise a power that he does not and never did possess. Here, in the course of proceedings which he, was forced to entertain, and in the case of one over whose person he has properly acquired jurisdiction, the justice is confronted with the necessity of deciding a question depending upon the construction to be given to a statute, and that question must be decided by him one way or the other before he can take another step in those proceedings which, up to that moment, have been legally and properly pending before him, and over which' he has had full and complete jurisdiction. It seems plain that his decision upon the question is one in the course of a proper exercise of the jurisdiction first committed to him, and that his error in deciding that he had jurisdiction to proceed was an error of judgment upon a question of law, and that he is, therefore, not responsible for such error in a civil action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 477, 128 N.Y. 229, 40 N.Y. St. Rep. 338, 83 Sickels 229, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-vrooman-ny-1891.