Diveny v. . City of Elmira

51 N.Y. 506
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 51 N.Y. 506 (Diveny v. . City of Elmira) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diveny v. . City of Elmira, 51 N.Y. 506 (N.Y. 1873).

Opinion

Earl, C.

The action was brought to trial in the city of Elmira, and the case states that when the cause was moved for trial twelve jurors were drawn and answered to their names; and thereupon plaintiff’s counsel objected to six of the jurors, on the ground that they were incompetent by reason of their being residents and tax-payers of the city of Elmira. The defendant’s counsel claimed and insisted to the court that the six jurors were not incompetent for the reason stated, and objected to their being excused or excluded from the jury; but the court sustained the objection and held the six jurors to be incompetent to serve on the trial for the *509 reason stated, and discharged them from the jury, and ordered the clerk to draw six other jurors in their stead who were not residents and tax-payers of the city, which was accordingly done, and the jurors thus empanneled were sworn to try the cause. Defendant’s counsel excepted to these rulings of the court, and this exception raises the most important question for our consideration upon this appeal.

The case states that plain tiff’s counsel “objected” to the jurors, not that he “ challenged” them; but to challenge a juror is to object to him as incompetent for some reason. And the objection here was understood to be a challenge, and was treated as such and disposed of as such; and hence we must treat this objection as if it were a formal challenge.

The case does not show how it was made to appear to the court that the six jurors were residents and tax-payers of the city. The plaintiff’s counsel objected to them for that reason. Defendant’s counsel claimed that they were not incompetent for that reason, and the court for that reason held them to be incompetent. The fact was not denied, and was assumed by all parties to be true, and hence we must assume it to be true.

The question, therefore, to be determined is, whether a resident and tax-payer of the city was incompetent as a juror upon the trial of this action. The object of the law is to procure impartial, unbiased persons for jurors. They must be omni exceptione mayores. They must have no interest in the subject-matter of the litigation. In this case, a verdict against the city would impose additional burdens upon all the tax-paying residents thereof. Hence such residents are, at common law, incompetent to serve as jurors in a case to which the city is a party, or in which the city is directly interested. In Coke upon Littleton (157, a and 5, it is said: “ If a body politick or incorporate, sole or aggregate of many, bring any action that concerns their body politick or incorporate, if the juror be of kindred to any that is of that body (although the body politick or incorporate can have no kindred), yet for that those bodies consist of natural persons, it is a principal challenge ; ” “ if a juror be within the hundred, leet, or any other *510 way within the seigniory immediately or mediately, or any-other distress of either party, this is a principal challenge; ” in a cause where a parson is party, and the right of the Church Committee in debate, a parishioner is a principal challenge.” (See also Bacon’s Ab’g, Juries, e.)

In Commonwealth v. Ryan (5 Mass., 90), the defendant was indicted for keeping a billiard table, and was tried in the- Municipal Court, held in Boston. The penalty for the offence was a fine of fifty dollars for the use of the town. After conviction, the defendant moved to quash the indictment on the ground that the foreman of the grand jury who found the bill was a taxable inhabitant of the town, and thus interested in his conviction. Chief Justice Parsons, in writing the opinion of the court, says: “ Considering the question abstractedly, there certainly was an interest in all the grand jury, as inhabitants of Boston, to recover this penalty from the defendant. This interest at common law would be a sufficient objection, and it now is, unless by the necessary construction of our statutes this objection is removed,”

In Wood v. Stoddard (2 Johns., 195), the action was gui tarn, under the act for preventing usury, which gave a moiety of the sum to be recovered to the poor of the town where the offence was committed, and the other moiety to the person prosecuting, and it was held a good cause of chai lenge against the jury that they were inhabitants of the town, on the ground that jurors must be free from all exception, and wholly disinterested. Many statutes recognizing this common law disability of jurors have been enacted to remove it. It is provided (1 R. S., 397) that, on the trial of any action in which a town shall be a party or be interested, the electors and inhabitants of such town shall be competent witnesses and jurors, except that in suits and proceedings by and against towns no inhabitant of either town shall be a juror;” and that on the trial of every action in which a county shall be interested the electors and inhabitants of such county shall be competent- witnesses and jurors ” (1 B. S., 385); and that in penal actions for the recovery of any sum it shall not be a *511 good cause of challenge to the jurors summoned, etc., that such juror, etc., is liable to pay taxes in any town or county which may be benefited by such recovery” (2 R. S., 420), and that “ no inhabitant of any town, city or county shall be disqualified as a juror or witness, in any cause brought to recover any penalty or forfeiture, on the ground that such penalty or forfeiture is to be applied for the benefit of such town, city or county, or for the benefit of the poor thereof.” (2 R. S., 551.)

It will be seen that none of these provisions except the last has any reference to cities, and that the last has reference only to actions to recover a penalty or forfeiture. These six jurors were not therefore rendered competent by any of these provisions, and it only remains to inquire whether there was anything in the charter of the city which rendered them competent in this action.

By the city charter (Laws of 1860, ch. 139), the prior village charter was necessarily abrogated, and the village was absorbed into the city. By the village charter (Laws of 1850, ch. 185, tit. 7, § 2), it was provided that no person shall be an incompetent judge, justice, witness or juror by reason of his being an inhabitant or freeholder in the village of Elmira in any action or proceeding in which the said village shall be interested,” but this provision was not incorporated into the city charter. By the city charter (tit. 4, § 5), it is provided that “ the city shall be regarded as a town under the provisions of title 4, chap. 7, third part of the Revised Statutes, respecting the return of jurors, and the supervisors and clerks of said city shall perform the duties thereof as enjoined upon the supervisors, assessors and town clerks of the several towns of this State.” The portion of the Revised Statutes here referred to has reference to the returning, summoning, and drawing jurors, and contains no provision for removing the'ineompetency of jurors on account of interest in any case. The only object of this provision in the charter was to provide the method for returning jurors, so that they could be

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.Y. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diveny-v-city-of-elmira-ny-1873.