Gould v. Root

4 Hill & Den. 554

This text of 4 Hill & Den. 554 (Gould v. Root) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Root, 4 Hill & Den. 554 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

By the Courts

Cowen, J.

Under the circumstances, I feel no inclination to relieve the defendants on the ground of merits. Upon the facts disclosed, I entertain no doubt that the first judge was right in revoking the order to stay the proceedings ; nor that the subsequent order obtained from the commissioner was irregular. The only question is, whether it was a nullity. The statute declares that the order being refused in whole or in part, no subsequent application in reference to the same matter and in the same stage of the proceedings shall be made to any other supreme court commissioner ; and if an order be made by the latter, it shall be revoked by him or by a justice of this court or circuit judge, on due proof of the facts. (2 R. S. 209, 210, § 27, 2d ed.) Section twenty-eight forbids a second application under a penalty. To say that an order may be thus obtained under pretence of an appeal from [556]*556or a motion to set aside the order of revocation, would let in the means of evading the statute. A revocation is, in effect, the same thing as an original refusal.

Must such an irregular and evasive order be obeyed till it is revoked 1 Revocation is the remedy to which the statute looks, in terms ; and there is great question whether, in principle, the course here taken was warranted. The only cases in which the statute authorizes a total disregard of the order are specified in the 25th and 26th sections. (2 R. S. 209,2d ed.) And I am not aware of any principle which authorizes a party to treat an order as a nonentity merely because a commissioner is forbidden to grant it or a party is forbidden to apply for it. It may be said of every order improvidently granted that the party and officer have done what the law has forbidden. To say that it has been fraudulently and collusively obtained is no more. But to allow as a consequence that it may therefore be disregarded, would be letting in a principle under which every judicial act might be questioned collaterally. The remedy is by direct proceeding, which, in the case of orders, is revocation, appeal, motion to supersede, &c. (See Jackson, ex dem. Dox, v. Jackson, 3 Cowen, 73 ; Lyon v. Burtis, 4 id. 538 ; Case v. Shepherd, 1 John. Cas. 245 : Wright v. Stevenson, 5 Taunt. 850.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Anon
22 Wend. 619 (New York Supreme Court, 1840)
Starr v. Francis
22 Wend. 633 (New York Supreme Court, 1840)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Hill & Den. 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-root-nycterr-1843.