Birge v. People

5 Park. Cr. 9
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Park. Cr. 9 (Birge v. People) 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
Birge v. People, 5 Park. Cr. 9 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

Balcom, J.

I did not understand when I settled the bill of exceptions in this case, that any objection was made on the ground that I should go to Cooperstown and have the other members of the Oyer and Terminer present on the settlement of the bill. I supposed the only ground of objection was, that the prisoner’s counsel had no right to make a bill of exceptions, and have the same settled, after the adjournment of the Oyer and Terminer without day; and I shall examine the questions now raised, on the supposition that this was the only objection taken to the Settlement or signing of the bill.

If there was no statute or rulé authorizing the settlement ■ of cases and exceptions in civil actions, subsequent to the adjournment of the Circuit Court, the same could not be settled after the final adjournment of that court, unless otherwise ordered. The law is the same in regard to criminal actions ; [11]*11and there is no statute or rule that authorizes the settlement of bills of exceptions in such actions after the final adjournment of the courts wherein they aré tried. The practice always has been, so far as my knowledge extends, to have bills of exceptions settled and signed in criminal cases before the final adjournment of the courts in which they are tried.

The statute authorizing exceptions in criminal cases is as follows : “ On the trial of any indictment, exceptions to any decision of the. court may be made by the defendant, in the same cases and manner provided by law in civil cases; and a bill thereof shall be settled, signed and sealed, and shall be filed with the clerk of the court, and returned upoú a writ of error, as now authorized in personal actions, or upon a certiorari, as hereinafter provided, and the same proceedings may be had to compel the signing and sealing of such bill and the return thereof” (2 R. S, 786, § 21.)

This statute does not require the prisoner’s counsel to serve a copy of his proposed bill of exceptions on the District Attorney, or authorize the latter to serve amendments thereto. It seems to contemplate that the bill shall be settled and signed in the presence of the prisoner, or his counsel, and the District Attorney, at the conclusion of the trial, or at least before the final adjournment of the court. What is said in section 23 (2 R. S., 736), in regard to staying judgment on the indictment, supports this conclusion; for there can be no stay of judgment until the bill of exceptions is settled and filed with the clerk. And when judgment is stayed, it is “ the duty of the District Attorney of the county immediately to sue out a writ of certiorari, returnable in the Supreme Court.” (2 R. S., 736, § 27.) Provision is also made when the prisoner sues out a writ of error for having the case heard as soon as practicable. (2 R. S., 740 and 741.) All the statutes applicable to the review of criminal cases denote speed; delays are guarded against, and speedy justice seems to have been contemplated by the legislature.

If bills of exceptions in criminal cases can be made and settled after the final adjournments of the courts wherein they [12]*12are tried, then the different members of such courts must convene at the court house where the trials have been had, or at some other place, for the settlement of each bill; for it seems the presiding judge cannot settle such bills alone; the other members-of such courts have a voice in the business. (See Clarke v. Dutcher, 19 Johns. R., 246.) If the members of such courts must reassemble for such purposes, ’who shall fix the time and place for them to meet or notify each one to attend ? The legislature has made no provision on the subject, and there is no practice applicable to the question. .

For the foregoing reasons, I am of the opinion the judges of a Court of Oyer and Terminer are hot authorized to settle a bill of exceptions after the final adjournment of such court. -This conclusion is in harmony with the decision of this court, made at a general term in the first district, in The People v. Appo (18 How. Pr. R., 350), where it was held that all the powers of a Court of Oyer and Terminer terminate when it adjourns sine die.

It follows that the bill of exceptions in this case could not be settled and signed after the final adjournment of the court wherein the exceptions were taken, and that the bill is improperly in the return to the writ of error, and must be struck out. The writ' of error, however, cannot be dismissed; for it is a writ of right. (2 R. S., 740, § 15.) The prisoner has the right "to have it retained, although there will be no bill of exceptions in the record.

I will remark, further, that I do not regret, coming to the conclusion in this case, that the bill of exceptions must be expunged from the record, for the reason that no intimation was made, prior to the final adjournment of the Oyer and Terminer, at which the prisoner was convicted, of any desire or intention to make a bill of exceptions, and I am well satisfied the prisoner was guilty of the crime of which he was convicted.

Mason, J.

[13]*13was improvidently allowed, and the bill illegally settled. The bill of exceptions must be settled by the Court of Oyer and Terminer as a court. It cannot be settled by the circuit judge who presides in the Oyer and Terminer. And if we assume that the bill can be settled by the Court of Oyer and Terminer, convened in vacation (which I very much doubt), it does not help the case, for the bill was settled by the presiding judge alone in the absence of his associates, and was then presented to the other justices, and signed by them. This was clearly unauthorized. The principle settled in Clarke v. Dutcher (19 Johns. R., 236), is decisive of this question. In this case, the bill of exceptions was presented to the judges of the Court of Common Pleas, individually, out of court, and was signed and sealed by them separately, and this court held the bill of exceptions irregular, and that it should be settled by all the judges, sitting together as a court. The court say, “separately and individually, they cannot act judicially as a court. This it seems to me is too plain a proposition to require the citation of authorities to establish.” The doctrine of the common law is, that when, a power, authority or duty involving the exercise of judgment and discretion, is confided by law, to three or more persons, or whenever three or more officers are authorized, or required by law to perform any act, such act may be done, and such power, authority or duty may be exercised and performed by a majority of such persohs or officers, upon a meeting, and consultation of all. All must meet and confer, or the act is invalid (4 Denio R., 125; 21 Wend. R, 211; 23 Id., 324; Cow. R., 328; 7 Id., 526; 3 Denio R., 252, 253), and this is statute law with us in. this State. (2 R. S., 555, § 27; see, also, Keeler, v. Frost & Worden, 22 Barb. R., 400.) The common law practice required the bill of exceptions to be presented during the term at which the trial took place. (9 Johns. R., 346.) There is nothing in the statute which would interfere with the elementary common law doctrine, that the court as a court must settle the bill of exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Park. Cr. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birge-v-people-nysupct-1860.