Gould v. Chapin

4 How. Pr. 185
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 How. Pr. 185 (Gould v. Chapin) 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
Gould v. Chapin, 4 How. Pr. 185 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

Sill, Justice.

Section 401 of the code provides that “ motions must be made in the district in which the action is triable, or in a county adjoining that in which it is triable, except that where the action is triable in the first judicial district, the motion must be made therein.”

It is insisted by the defendants that within the meaning of this section, this cause is triable in Albany county, and it is preliminarily objected that this motion cannot be entertained in the seventh district. The [187]*187plaintiffs reside in Monroe connty, and that county was specified in the complaint as the place of trial. After issue joined on the application of the defendants, an order was made changing the place of trial to Albany connty.

By section 142, of the code, the plaintiff is required to specify in his complaint the county in which he desires the trial to be had; and by section 125, in transitory actions the plaintiff, in designating the county, is limited to one in which a party to the suit resides, provided any of the parties reside in this state. In case these provisions of section 125 are disregarded, and some other county than the residence of a party is designated in the complaint as the place of trial, section 126 entitles the defendant to have the venue changed to the proper county, provided he demands it before the time for answering expires. It will be seen that this is not a case where the order to change the place of trial could have been made under section 126, and it must, therefore, have been done under the authority reserved to the court in the latter clause of section 125, where it is said that the place of trial is subject to be changed by the courts in cases provided by statute.

Section 49, of the Judiciary Act, is the statute applicable to such cases, and is the statute to which this clause of section 125 of the code refers, and the one under which the order in this case, changing the place of trial to Albany county, must have been made. (Lynch v. Mosher, 4 Howard, 86.)

It is to this section, therefore, that we are to look to determine the effect of the order in question. Section 49 of the Judiciary Act, provides that the court may, in a proper case, order any issue offact pined in" a cause, to be tried in any county, other than that named in the declaration or complaint. But such an order does not carry with it a change of the venue in the cause. (Barnard v. Wheeler, 3 Howard, 71, 72 ; Beardsley v. Dickinson, 4 Howard, 81; and Lynch v. Mosher, above cited.) The effect of the order in this case, was to send the issue of fact to Albany county for trial; and as a consequence, those proceedings in the cause, incidental to, and necessarily connected with the trial, went there also. But other proceedings were not affected by the order. The defendants’counsel contends that the order has the effect to change the venue and transfer the cause to Albany county; or, in other words, the cause is to be regarded as though Albany county had been originally designated as the place of trial. This is clearly not the case. I have already adverted to the distinction between a change of venue and a change of the place of trial under section 49, of the Judiciary Act, and referred to decisions showing that the venue in this cause still remains [188]*188in Monroe county. This distinction between the venue and place of trial was made important by the Judiciary Act, and was recognized and intended to be retained by the commissioners on practice, (see the first report, page, 128.) Under the Judiciary Act, a change of the place of trial, pursuant to section 49, did not change the place for making motions in the cause. That act provided that all motions should be made in the county in which the venue in the suit should be laid, or in an adjoining county, (§ 51.) Of this provision, the clause quoted above from section 401 of the code, is a revision and a substitute. This extends the territorial limits within the which the motion, may be made, so as to embrace the entire district in which the action is triable. And it is plain that such extension was the only object of the revision. The latter section, indeed, speaks of the district where the action is triable, and not that where the venue is laid. But this change in phraseology does not necessarily indicate a design to change the practice; and this form of expression was adopted, not with a design to change the law, but it would seem to get rid of the word venue, which, inasmuch as it belongs to the vocabulary of technical legal language, it was thought advisable not to admit into the Code of Procedure.

The position of the defendants’ counsel is also inconsistent with the latter part of section 49, of the act of 1847. This provision requires in cases like the present that the clerk of the county where the trial takes jDlace, shall certify the minutes and they shall be filed in the county where the issue is joined; and the subsequent proceedings in the cause shall be had in that county as though the trial had taken place there. The county where the issue is joined, is of course that where the venue is laid, or in other words that specified in the complaint as the place of trial. (Rule 5, of 1847 ; Rule 3, of 1849.) Another consideration still, will show the impracticability of giving a general application to the views of the defendants’ counsel on this point of practice. Issues of law and fact may now, as formerly, be joined in the same cause; and the examination of an issue of law is declared to be a trial. (Code, § 252.) There is no statute under which the courts can order an issue of law to be tried out of the county originally specified in the complaint, or that substituted under section 126 of the code. And the cause must, for this purpose, be triable in the district where the venue is regardless of any order that changes the place for trying an issue of fact. I am satisfied that the district in which the action is triable, within the meaning of § 401, is the district in which the venue is, and that this motion is properly made in the seventh district, in which Monroe county lies. [189]*189The referee’s certificate and the pleadings in the cause are relied on to show that this is a difficult case, or an extraordinary one, in which the plaintiff is entitled to an allowance in addition to costs. We have no guide or test by which to determine what is within section 308 of the code, a difficult or extraordinary case; and as has been well remarked, there will be among the judges a great diversity of opinion, and as a consequence, no uniformity in the practice under this law. (Hall v. Prentice, 3 How. 328-9 ; Sacket v. Ball, 4 id. 71.) Such being the case, it is, in my opinion, the safest practice to deny the allowance in all doubtful cases, and to grant it only in those which, on account of their peculiarities or difficulties, plainly distinguish them from the great mass of litigated suits. From the pleadings, the present case does not appear to me to be singular in its character: and taken with the opposing affidavits, I think it is shown to be one of a class very common in our courts. Every case where a defence is honestly interposed, and a recovery seriously resisted, presents some difficulties, but it does not therefore necessarily come within section 208.

The referee’s certificate (assuming that it may be properly used as the foundation of the motion) does not state what questions arose on the trial, nor what the questions of law were, which he deemed difficult ones.

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Bluebook (online)
4 How. Pr. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-chapin-nysupct-1849.