Cobb v. Harmon

29 Barb. 472, 1859 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 185
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 Barb. 472 (Cobb v. Harmon) 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
Cobb v. Harmon, 29 Barb. 472, 1859 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 185 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

By the Court, E. Darwin Smith, J.

^ When the hearing, before the officer before whom the proceedings under the non-imprisonment act against the defendant Herrick had been instituted, was concluded, by his decision convicting Herrick of fraud, and he had taken from the defendants the bond upon which" this action is brought, the jurisdiction of the officer was at an end. There was no longer any Us pendens before him— nothing to abate by the death of the plaintiff’s intestate. From that time the defendant Herrick and his sureties, if they wished to avoid the bond then and there executed to procure the discharge of Herrick from imprisonment, became the actors. It was for the defendant Herrick, within thirty days, to apply for an assignment of his property and for his discharge, as provided in the act. He made his application, in due time, to the county judge of Ontario, the county of his residence, and at the day fixed for the hearing, the county judge was absent from the county and disabled by sickness, from hearing it, and the proceeding therefore became discontinued. And it is now claimed by the counsel for the defendants, that Herrick being then a resident of Ontario county, the county judge of that county was the only officer to whom the application for his discharge according to the provisions of said act could properly have been made, and that such county judge being entirely incapable of hearing and granting such application on the day fixed for that purpose, it became impossible for the defendants to perform the obligation of the bond, and that they are therefore excused from such performance, and discharged from all liability thereon. This question has been so fully examined, in the opinion of the learned referee who [476]*476tried the cause, that I should have felt entirely satisfied to affirm. the judgment upon the views so well expressed in his opinion; but the case has been argued here with so much earnestness and ability, and we have been presented with a brief of counsel so elaborately prepared, that I have deemed it my duty to examine the case, as I have done, with particular care. «. If the obligation of the defendants were to be regarded as an ordinary contract voluntarily entered into, it would hardly be contended, I presume, that any mistake or misfortune, or inevitable accident or unforeseen impediment, would discharge the defendants from their duty; because, in such cases, they might have provided against these contingencies in the contract. It is only when the law creates or casts the duty, that the party may be excused from compliance, when he is disabled from performing it, without any fault on his part, by the act of Grod or of the law, rendering performance impossible. (Beebe v. Johnson, 19 Wend. 500. Harmony v. Bingham, 2 Kernan, 99. 1 id. 25.)

The bond given in this case was one prescribed and required by law; and I think it should be governed by the same rules of responsibility which apply to special bail. It is like the bond to the sheriff on a capias ad respondendum, or the obligation assumed by special bail. It is a bond given to procure the discharge of a party from imprisonment, given and executed under and in pursuance of the requirement of the law. In this view of the obligation incurred by these defendants, if it clearly appeared that the law had rendered compliance with the obligation of the bond impossible, I think the defendants should be excused from such performance. By the original section 12 of the act to abolish imprisonment for debt, the application which the defendant Herrick was bound to make might have been made to a justice of the supreme court, a circuit judge, any judge of the county court, or a supreme court commissioner in the "county in which such defendant resided or was imprisoned. From the whole statute, and the several provisions of the revised statutes therein referred to, and from [477]*477the obvious implications and policy of the act, I think the limitation, applied apparently to the supreme court commissioner in said section, as the same is punctuated in the original act as printed in the session laws of 1831, was intended to apply to all the officers named in the act, and that the punctuation is erroneous—the mistake, probably, of the printer or copyist. I can see no object in applying the limitation to a supreme court commissioner that would not apply to either of the five countyjudges in each county, composing the county courts under the constitution then existing, or even to the circuit judge or justices of this court. It could hardly have been the intention of the legislature to allow these applications to be made to a justice of this court or a circuit judge, at the option of the applicant, in any part of the state. I think, therefore, that the county judge of Ontario, (no justice of this court residing in the county,) was the only proper officer to whom this application could have been made at the time while the defendant Herrick continued to reside in that county. But if it could not be granted in Ontario county, for any reason, I have no doubt that Herrick was bound to remove into some other county, if necessary to confer jurisdiction upon some other officer. (Beebe v. Johnson, 19 Wend. 500.) But the application having been made to the county judge of Ontario county, when it was found that he could not entertain it within the thirty days and grant the discharge, the defendant Herrick was still bound to continue the proceeding before some other officer, if any one could in time have been substituted in his place. By section 19 of the original act to abolish imprisonment for debt, the general provisions applicable to the proceedings under the several articles of title first, part 2d of the revised statutes, which are contained in the seventh article of said title, were made applicable to the proceedings under said act, “ so far as the same is not inconsistent with the provisions thereof.” Sections 4, 5 and 6 of the said seventh article contain general provisions applicable to the proceedings under the several articles of said title first of chapter five, referred to ; [478]*478and these provisions of said sections 4, 5 and 6, were all designed to provide against the failure of proceedings under any of the articles of said title by reason of the non-residence of the proper officer in any county, or by reason of the death, sickness, resignation, removal from office, absence from the county, or other disability of any officer before whom any proceedings may have been commenced under either of the articles of said title.

By section six it is provided that if there be no officer in any county competent to continue proceedings commenced by any officer in the cases specified in either of said articles, then any judge of the county courts may attend at the time and place appointed for the hearing of the matter, and adjourn the same to the next court of common pleas to be held in and for said county in which such hearing was appointed; which court shall proceed therein in the same manner and with the like authority as the officer who commenced such proceedings. .

If these proceedings are applicable, then any judge of .the court of sessions, which is the only county court now existing composed of several judges, might have attended at the time and place fixed for the defendant Herrick to make his application, and adjourned the hearing thereof. But if these proceedings are not applicable to the case—and I do not think they are—then section 58 of chapter 3, part 3, article second, (2 R. S. 284, 3d

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Bluebook (online)
29 Barb. 472, 1859 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-harmon-nysupct-1859.