Forrest v. . Forrest

25 N.Y. 501
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 25 N.Y. 501 (Forrest v. . Forrest) 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
Forrest v. . Forrest, 25 N.Y. 501 (N.Y. 1862).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 503

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 504

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 505 This controversy, as like cases are apt to be, has been bitter and protracted. Twelve years since the wife brought her action against the husband for a divorce on the ground of adultery; and for over eleven years she has had the verdict of a jury convicting him of the offence, and the judgment of the court dissolving the marriage. During this latter period the controversy has been principally in respect to alimony, a mere incident of the judgment. For more than ten years the plaintiff has been divorced from the defendant, and at liberty to marry again; yet we are now called upon to review the judgment of divorce, and if a merely technical error shall be discovered in the protracted trial of the issues of adultery of the defendant or plaintiff, to reverse such judgment. Six years had elapsed from the affirmation of the judgment by the general term of the Superior Court, before this appeal was brought; and as the judgment for a divorce was a final and perfect one, and the "further decree or order" for alimony, not any part of it, or a necessary consequence of such judgment, but resting in the discretion of the court, and the judgment not having been appealed from within two years, we should probably have dismissed the appeal a term or two since when a motion to dismiss it was made, had the law regulating appeals to this court been the same as originally enacted in the Code. In 1857, however, the provision in respect to appeals was so amended as to authorize an appeal to be taken "within two years after the judgment shall be perfected, by filing the roll thereof, and entering the same in the judgment book, in the proper clerk's office" (Ch. 723, of 1857, § 18), and in 1858, it was still further amended so as to allow an appeal to be taken "within two years after the judgment shall be perfected by filing the judgment roll." (Ch. 306, of 1858, § 14.) The judgment roll in this case was not filed, as would seem until March, 1862, and the defendant had two years from the latter date within which to appeal, and before a review in *Page 506 this court could be barred. By section 331 of the Code of 1851, the appeal must have been taken two years after the rendition of the judgment; but by subsequent amendments of the section it was allowed to be taken within two years after "the judgment shallbe perfected by filing the judgment roll." We are of the opinion, therefore, that a review in this court of the judgment affirmed at the general term in January, 1856, is not barred by the statute.

A preliminary point made by the defendant is, that the Superior Court had not jurisdiction of the action. This point was first raised on appeal to the general term, but if well taken is available at any stage of the suit. It proceeds on the ground that the legislature was incompetent to confer, and, in fact, has not conferred, jurisdiction in divorce cases on the Superior Court. I think the ground is not maintainable. During our colonial existence, and for more than ten years after the colony became a state, there was no authority in any court of this state to grant a divorce. In 1787, the legislature conferred authority upon the Court of Chancery to grant divorces in cases of adultery. This continued to be the only law until the revision of 1813, when the legislature made a new and extensive provision for divorces, and widening the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery.

It was competent for the legislature to have conferred the jurisdiction upon an existing court or to have created one having powers as to divorce cases similar to the ecclesiastical courts of England. The Constitution of 1821 imposed no restriction on the power of the legislature in this respect. In the Revised Statutes, while continuing the authority in the Court of Chancery on matters of divorce, the legislature adopted a system in many respects new, and more comprehensive, and to some extent regulating the practice in that class of cases. The tendency of legislation from the beginning was to invest the court of equity with an authority over a subject that in England belonged exclusively to the spiritual courts and to Parliament. Thus the law continued until 1846, when the Constitution abolished the Court of Chancery, and *Page 507 provided for a Supreme Court having general jurisdiction in laws and equity. The same power was given to the legislature "to alter and regulate the jurisdiction and proceedings in law and equity as they have heretofore possessed." (Const., art. 6, § 6.) By the judiciary act of 1847, the Supreme Court was vested with the same powers, and authorized to exercise the same jurisdiction as was then possessed and exercised by the Court of Chancery. (Ch. 280 of 1847, § 16.) The Constitution of 1846 had provided expressly for the establishment by the legislature of inferior local courts of civil and criminal jurisdiction in cities, (Const., art. 6, § 14,) and that the Superior Court of the city of New York should remain until otherwise directed by the legislature, with its then powers and jurisdiction. (Const., art. 14, § 12.) In 1848 the legislature abolished the distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, and the forms of all such actions and suits theretofore existing, and enacted that there should be in this State thereafter but one form of action for the enforcement or protection of private rights and the redress or prevention of private wrongs, which should be denominated a civil action. (Code of 1848, § 62.) Remedies in courts of justice were divided into actions and special proceedings, and an action was defined to be an ordinary proceeding in a court of justice by which a party prosecutes another party for the enforcement of a right, the redress or prevention of a wrong, or the punishment of a public offence. (Code of 1849, § 22.) The Code prescribed a uniform mode for the commencement of the action, viz.: by summons and complaint; and as indicative of the intention of the legislature to embrace within the definition of an action under the Code, one for a divorce, the amended Code of 1851, expressly provided for the service of the summons by publication when the defendant could not, after due diligence, be found within the State, "where the action was for divorce in the cases prescribed by law." (Code of 1851, § 135, sub. 5.) The Code provides that the jurisdiction of the Superior Court shall extend to the actions enumerated in sections 123 and 124 (when the causes of action are local or against public officers) *Page 508 and to all other actions where all of the defendants shall reside or are personally served with the summons within the city of New York. (Code of 1849, § 33.) This language is comprehensive enough to embrace an action for a divorce against a person resident and served with summons in the city of New York. The defendant resided and was served with the summons within that city.

By no proper construction of the Constitution of 1846, can it be deemed to have vested in the Supreme Court, as successor of the Court of Chancery, the whole jurisdiction as to divorce cases, without any authority in the legislature to confer it on any other tribunal.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.Y. 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forrest-v-forrest-ny-1862.