Barnes v. Roosevelt

87 Misc. 55, 149 N.Y.S. 291
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 87 Misc. 55 (Barnes v. Roosevelt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Roosevelt, 87 Misc. 55, 149 N.Y.S. 291 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Chester, J.

The action is for damages for an alleged libel claimed to have been published by the defendant concerning the plaintiff. The plaintiff resides in the county of Albany and has laid the venue in that county. The defendant moves to change the venue under subdivision 2 of section 987 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that the court may change the place of trial ‘ ‘ where there is reason to believe that an impartial trial cannot be had in the proper county.”

It was the plaintiff’s right under the law to lay the venue in the county of his residence, and that of course was a proper county. The only other proper county in which the action could have been brought was the county of Nassau, where the defendant resides. Code Civ. Pro., § 984. If the action had been brought in any other county of the state than in one of the two named, and the defendant had chosen to move the court to change the venue to Nassau county, there would have been no discretion left but to have so ordered unless on such an application it should have been made to appear that the convenience of witnesses would be promoted by having the cause tried in another county.

Several grounds are urged in the moving papers as reasons for the order asked for. They are all aimed to convince the court that an impartial trial cannot be had in the county where the venue has been laid. The principal reasons urged in support of the motion are that prejudice exists against the defendant in Albany county and that the political influence and dominance of the plaintiff in the county of his residence is such that the defendant will be unable to secure a fair trial and impartial jury there, as the trial will involve the determination of political questions. The action is, however, solely one in which the plaintiff [57]*57seeks to recover damages for an alleged personal injury. Suck an action should he determined free from any influence arising from the activities or sentiments of either the plaintiff or the defendant in or relating to partisan affairs. If any prejudice exists against either party, it is, I think, political and not personal, and it does not involve the merits of the controversy between them.

It is charged by the defendant that political considerations have entered into the selection of juries in Albany county. For proof of that assertion a copy of what is known as the 1‘ Bayne Report ’ ’ is annexed to the moving papers. That was the report of a senate committee appointed by a Democratic senate to investigate the affairs of the city and county of Albany, and among other things it was reported that the trial juries in that county ‘ ‘ are selected according to their political affiliations and that so many more Republicans are selected than those of a different political faith because of a settled policy to keep the civil judicial system under the control and influence of Republican leaders or subject to political prejudice.” .The testimony upon which that report or that conclusion was based was ex parte in character and was furnished by political partisans. The witnesses were not cross-examined and were not permitted to be cross-examined. The evidence was largely hearsay and was of such a character that it would not have been received in a court of justice. More than this it had relation to the jury list of 1911. It compared that list with the vote at the presidential election of 1908, rather than at other elections, where a much greater preponderance of Republican votes were cast. On .reading the testimony on which the report was based, no other conclusion can be reached by any fair minded man but that there was a strained effort to warp the truth [58]*58with respect to the character of the jury panel for that year. Subsequent to that report a non-partisan committee of the Albany County Bar Association was appointed at the request of the State Bar Association to make a report to the latter association upon the question as to whether any action was necessary or desirable as to the administration of justice in Albany county. That committee held a public session at the court room, to which the public generally was invited, for the purpose of hearing grievances and suggestions or recommendations on the part of any one upon the subject. Notice was given to every member of the County Bar Association and special and extended notices were published in the columns of the local newspapers inviting suggestions. Notice was also served upon various organizations, including some forty labor organizations, inviting their membership to appear and give their views. After all this the report of the committee contained no criticism of the jury system as administered under the law relating to the county of Albany. The only. change recommended was an amendment of the law to permit fewer exemptions from jury service, in the hope that the intellectual standard of jurors might be elevated.

But whatever the fact was in reference to the trial jury panel of 1911 against which the criticisms of the Bayne report were aimed, it can be of no consequence now, for under the law a new jury list is made up for each year and the present panel is not the one criticised.

In Albany county there is a commissioner of jurors who makes up the jury lists. He is appointed by a board consisting of the justices of the Supreme Court residing in the county and the county judge. Laws of 1899, chap. 441, as amd. by Laws of 1900, chap. 320. Acting as a member of that board, I take my full share [59]*59of the responsibility for the appointment and the reappointment of the present commissioner of jurors, Mr. Thomas J. Wood, who has served continuously in that office since 1896. He is a man of high character whose personal integrity has never to my knowledge been questioned. He has not only been instructed by the board which appointed him, but he has presented his affidavit upon this motion, that the political opinions of men on the jury lists have never had anything to do with his work in making up the lists or in passing upon qualifications for or exemptions from jury service.

The plaintiff’s counsel has presented proof on this motion of a partial examination of the present jury list, which clearly shows that so far as the political inclinations of the men upon it are concerned they fairly and proportionately represent each of the political parties in the county.

Several very respectable members of the Progressive party, including several lawyers with but limited experience in jury trials, however, have presented affidavits on behalf of the defendant, that in their opinion he cannot secure a fair trial here. On the other hand the plaintiff has furnished the affidavits of ten lawyers of large practice at this bar. of differing political faiths, as well as of several bankers, clergymen and physicians distinguished in the social, professional and religious life of this community, stating that they know of no reason why the defendant may not have a fair trial here.

In view of these divergent opinions, which have been given fair consideration, I may be permitted to venture an opinion as to jury trials generally in this county.

A somewhat extended service upon the . bench, and in presiding over jury trials here and in many other counties of the state, leads me to believe that juries [60]*60in Albany county discharge the difficult duties cast upon them as fairly and as well as those of any other county where trials by jury have come under my observation.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Misc. 55, 149 N.Y.S. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-roosevelt-nysupct-1914.