Conover v. Devlin

24 Barb. 636
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 Barb. 636 (Conover v. Devlin) 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
Conover v. Devlin, 24 Barb. 636 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

Peabody, J.

Proceedings having been instituted before me, under 1 R. S. 125, § 56, to compel Mr. Devlin to deliver to Mr. Conover the books and papers pertaining to the office of street „ commissioner of the city of New York, on the ground that the applicant was the successor of the late incumbent, to the office to which they appertain, and the parties having been heard from [637]*637day to day until the 8th of July, 1857, and my decision having been announced on that day, that the applicant was such successor, and as such was entitled to the relief asked, that is, to the warrants provided for in that section, one that the respondent be committed to the jail of the county until he should deliver them, and the other that the sheriff search for said property and seize it, that it might be delivered to the applicant, as therein provided, an order to that effect was accordingly made, reduced to writing and signed by me, on the 10th day of said July. That order was immediately served on the respondent, and delivery of the papers, in compliance with it, demanded, which was refused. This refusal was followed by an immediate application for the warrants contemplated by the act, to which, by my decision embodied in the order I had determined, he was entitled. Pending this application, and while a discussion respecting the effect of an injunction then in force, restraining the applicant from taking into his possession the books and papers was in progress, a writ of certiorari from the supreme court was served on me, commanding me to certify to that court my proceedings in the premises. The injunction has since been dissolved, and I am now asked to issue the warrants, notwithstanding the certiorari.

The fact that this writ, from its operation, suspends the power of the officer to whom it is addressed, is not denied by the applicant, but, on the contrary, it is admitted as a general proposition ; but that such is not the effect in this particular case, is insisted on several grounds, some of which seem to arrange themselves under the following heads, and which I will proceed to consider:

1. It is said that this proceeding, in its nature being summary, and intended to confer present possession merely, not to determine the ultimate rights of the parties, is not subject to the operation of this writ. And there is much of good sense in the suggestion that such a proceeding should not be liable to be suspended in this manner. It does not determine the ultimate rights of the parties, but leaves them to be determined in a more grave and formal proceeding. They depend on the [638]*638right to the office, for ascertaining which, ample provision was made before. The ancient prerogative writ of quo warranto gave contesting claimants a mode of determining controversies respecting office, conclusive in its nature on all the parties interested. In that writ, in its day, as since in the action of the same name, the sovereign was the nominal and real plaintiff, while the person asserting his rights to the office, if there were such a claimant, was made a party incidentally, under the title of relator, and in fact was and is practically plaintiff, so far as the assertion and protection of his own rights is concerned; and the defendant, who was called on by the proceeding to show by what authority he held the office, if unable to show sufficient warrant in law, and found not entitled to it, was, in obedience to the rights of the plaintiff, (and the quasi plaintiff, if he was deemed entitled,) ousted. The state was thus freed from the evil of an unlawful exercise of its franchise by an intruder, and a vacancy was made, into which the quasi plaintiff or relator was inducted, if his title was approved ; and if not, the office remained vacant and ready for the occupation of the person who should be duly selected and qualified to fill it. The right to the office being thus determinéd, the right to the books and papers appertaining to it followed it as a necessary and inevitable consequence, and thus in a grave and dignified manner the rights of the parties were ascertained and declared, and subsequently, by adequate process, enforced.

This proceeding, however, was not thought sufficiently speedy to answer all purposes, and accordingly, to supply immediate and urgent necessities, the statute under which I am acting is made applicable, by which, in a brief and summary manner, on a decision of the question of succession, in fact, merely, may the incumbent be put into possession of the books and papers for the time being. Thus, until the title can be ultimately ascertained, by the only conclusive adjudication, the person apparently in the possession and use of the franchise, with color of title, may be placed in possession of the books and papers incident to its use.

[639]*639In a case like the present, where the title to the office is in doubt, effect cannot otherwise be given to this statute without actually deciding the question of title, which I am confident, and all seem to agree, cannot have been the intent of the legislature. To transfer to a person not actually the incumbent of an office, at the time, the books and papers incident to it, which are often indispensable to its user, would not only be to adjudge his title in the abstract, but, moreover, for practical purposes, to induct the claimant—to invest him with the office; and thus it would perform the functions of a quo warranto, and more. It would be to decide the question of title, incidentally to the question of right to present possession of the books and papers.

Properly applied in this case,' this statute enables a person in and occupying an office to get possession of the books and papers incident to it, as the means of performing the duties of the place until the one actually entitled should be judicially ascertained. There would, therefore, seem to be propriety in limiting the decision of this question, in most cases, to the magistrate before whom it should originate, and be heard in the first instance; or at least allowing the matter before him to proceed to its conclusion, before a review should be allowed; and that was, doubtless, the intention of the legislature, in cases ordinarily arising, that a vacuum, said to be abhorrent in nature, should not occur in the administration of the duties of government. The question of temporary possession of books, &c. necessary to the performance of the duties of an office, until the title can be determined, would seem to be a very suitable one to be determined very speedily, and so this act seems to contemplate that it shall be, and such is the course in practice. But that no error, however palpable, no injustice, however gross, should be corrected by a revisory tribunal in any case, does not seem necessary, nor is there any evidence to show it to have been the intent of the legislature. All the usual means of procrastination are excluded. The time for appearing, after service of process, the delays incident to formal pleadings, to formal trials in term time, indeed all formalities, are dis[640]*640pensed with for"the sake of speed in arriving at the result. But one single mode of reviewing and correcting errors is left, and that by aid of the common law writ of certiorari—the venerable, hoary writ, as it was styled on the argument.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Barb. 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conover-v-devlin-nysupct-1867.