Bogert v. Hildreth

1 Cai. Cas. 1
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1803
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Cai. Cas. 1 (Bogert v. Hildreth) 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
Bogert v. Hildreth, 1 Cai. Cas. 1 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1803).

Opinions

Livingston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. This is a motion to vacate a rule entered the last term, “ for changing the venue to Montgomery, unless the plaintiffs would undertake to give evidence material to the issue Arising in the city and county of New-York.” It is now said,- that the court committed an error in changing the [3]*3venue; because, there being matter of law and matter in pais, material to the issue, in different counties,-the plaintiff • might elect to lay his action in either; and that, in such cases, it cannot be changed, unless for urgent or particular reasons. This rule, when well understood, is a salutary one, but it does not apply to this case ; it means, that-when official acts are done by the defendants in several counties, some of which are matters of record, and others of fact, there the plaintiff has his election. Thus, in the case of Griffith v. Walker, 1 Wils. 386, which was an action against the sheriffs of Eadnorshire, for a false return to a scire facias, the venue of which was laid in Herefordshire, it was alleged, on demurrer, that the action ought to have been laid in Eadnor, because, whatever acts the sheriff does officially, must be done in his own county, or at least, the law supposes them done there; but the court said, the sheriff may endorse his writ anywhere; and, as it is alleged that he did this in Herefordshire, the plaintiff has his election to lay his action where he can prove the fact done. Here the return was matter of record, but it is not on that account merely that this election is given, but because the sheriff was the party who made that return, which was the gist of the suit. If this return had, afterwards, been filed (as was no doubt the case) in the office of the court of king’s bench, it would not have justified the laying of the venue in that *county. In the case before us, it is said that [*3] the judgment roll against the party who escaped, is filed in an office kept in the city and county of Hew-York, and, therefore, the venue cannot be changed. This judgment was no act of the sheriff’s, and, therefore, not like the case of a return made by him in a particular county. Nor is it the ground of this action, which is, emphatically, the escape from the gaol of Montgomery.

A principal reason for permitting a plaintiff to retain the venue where he has laid it, arises from the circumstance of ■ his having material witnesses there. This rule should not be abused by too much refinement. If the recovery against [4]*4the party who has escaped must bé given in evidence on the trial, it may be done by exemplification, which is the proper way; and this maybe carried'without expense to Montgomery. Bulwer's Case, in 7 Co. 1, only determines, and that on demurrer, that an action for maliciously outlawing the plaintiff might be laid in the county where the copias uilagatum was executed; and not necessarily in Middlesex, where the wrong was commenced by issuing the copias ad satisfaciendum. This decides nothing; for although the plaintiff may, in many cases, in the first instance, choose his venue,

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Related

Clark v. Lawrence
1 Cow. 48 (New York Supreme Court, 1823)
Gourley v. Shoemaker
1 Johns. Cas. 392 (New York Supreme Court, 1800)
Moreland v. Sanford
1 Denio 660 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1845)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Cai. Cas. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bogert-v-hildreth-nysupct-1803.