Greenlund v. Fenner

127 Misc. 295, 216 N.Y.S. 357, 1926 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1012
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 127 Misc. 295 (Greenlund v. Fenner) 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
Greenlund v. Fenner, 127 Misc. 295, 216 N.Y.S. 357, 1926 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1012 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

Norton, J.

The plaintiff seeks to vacate a judgment granted- and entered in the above-entitled action, in favor of the defendants, upon the report of the referee therein, Hon. Warner S. Rexford; upon the ground that said referee was, at the time of his appointment, throughout the period of the trial, and when he made his report or decision therein, surrogate of Chautauqua county, which county had a population at all such times exceeding 120,000.

The facts, as conceded by the parties, are that Judge Rexford Was, by stipulation of the parties, on June 15, 1925, appointed such referee; that the trial commenced September 3, 1925, and terminated November 6, 1925, by the handing down of the referee’s report and decision, upon which the judgment in question, was entered, November 18, 1925,- that Judge Rexford was elected surrogate of Chautauqua county, for a term of six years, at the general election in November, 1922; that he qualified January 1, 1923, and has acted as such surrogate at all times thereafter.

[296]*296When he was so elected Chautauqua county, as fixed by the last official census (Federal, 1920), had a population of 115,348; the last preceding New York State official census (that of 1915) fixing such population at 116,818.

In 1925, commencing June first, and as of that date, an official enumeration of the residents of the State, including Chautauqua county, was taken, the result of which, as to Chautauqua county, was first reported or announced by the Secretary of State after the entry of such judgment.

Under date of March 15, 1926, the Secretary of State certified: That according to the last New York State enumeration of inhabitants, taken,as of June 1, 1925, the county of Chautauqua, is credited with the following population: Citizens, 120,586 (23 of which are Indians); aliens, 7,514; total, 128,100.”

On these facts, under section 20, article 6 of the State Constitution of 1894, which reads as follows: “ No judicial officer, except Justices of the Peace, shall receive to his own use any fees or perquisites of office; nor shall any Judge of the Court of Appeals, or Justice of the Supreme Court, or any Co.unty Judge or Surrogate hereafter elected in a county having a population exceeding one hundred and , twenty thousand, practice as an attorney or counselor in any court of record in this State, or act as referee,” the plaintiff claims that Judge Rexford was disqualified to act as such referee, and that, therefore, such judgment is void and must be vacated.

Plaintiff bases such claim on the contention that the words “ hereafter elected ” as used in such section relate solely to the county judges and surrogates in office at the time of the adoption •of the section, and do not affect nor except any such officials elected after the adoption thereof; as to them, that the words in a county having a population exceeding one hundred and twenty thousand ” are controlling; that immediately. Chautauqua county exceeded such population, as determined by a legal enumeration, the county judge and surrogate thereof were barred from the practice of law and from acting as referees.

If such is the correct construction of that provision, then the judgment herein must be vacated. The parties cannot by their consent or waiver remove from the Constitution such inhibition if it is therein contained. (Countryman v. Norton, 21 Hun, 17; Oakley v. Aspinwall, 3 N. Y. 547; People v. Whitridge, No. 2, 144 App. Div. 493; Van Arsdale v. King, 152 N. Y. 69; Duryea v. Traphagen, 84 id. 652.)

But the provision in question is open to another construction. Conceding plaintiff’s construction thereof to have some support in [297]*297its phraseology, yet it may be read to apply only to officials elected in a county having at the time they are so elected a population exceeding 120,000. The pertinent part reads: “ Nor,shall * * * any County Judge or Surrogate hereafter elected in a county having a population exceeding one hundred and twenty thousand, * * * act as referee.”

The construction of the section contended for by plaintiff requires a punctuation thereof that does not appear in the section as adopted. Read with the phraseology and punctuation of the section as written and adopted, it may reasonably be construed to apply only to officials elected in a county having at the time they are so elected a population exceeding 120,000.

While by punctuating the phrase as plaintiff claims it should be it would mean what the plaintiff contends for, standing as it is and giving each word its full meaning and emphasis, the fair import of the phrase excepts Judge Rexford from the inhibition of the section. Read as adopted, the word “ hereafter ” excepts from the inhibition those in office in counties exceeding 120,000 population at the time of adoption; and the word elected ” excepts those thereafter elected in counties of less than 120,000 population, when elected, but which, before the expiration of the terms for which they are elected, exceed 120,000.

The history of such provision; the provisions which antedated and succeeded it; and the situation to which it was to apply at .the time of its adoption, may be considered in the endeavor to arrive at what the framers thereof intended.

Prior to 1894, article 6, section 21, of the Constitution of 1869 read as follows: “ No judicial officer, except Justices of the Peace, shall receive to his own use, any fees or perquisites of office; nor shall any Judge of the Court of Appeals, Justice of the Supreme Court, or Judge of a Court of record in the cities of New York, Brooklyn or Buffalo, practice as an attorney or counselor in any court of record in this State, or act as Referee.”

■In 1894 the Constitution was amended and such section 21 became section 20, and was changed to read as hereinbefore quoted.

When that amendment was adopted there were eight counties only in the State to which the inhibition applied; to such counties also was the postponement of the application thereof thereby made effective. Between 1894 and 1925, the whole period that such section 20 was in force, Bronx county, by erection in 1900 and Nassau county in 1920, by increase in population, joined the counties subject to such inhibition, and Rensselaer, in 1920, by loss of population, left that class.

[298]*298In 1925, effective January 1, 1926, the judiciary article of the Constitution Was revised and the provision in question was incorporated in section 19 of article 6, and amended to read as follows: and a county judge or surrogate elected in a county having a population exceeding one hundred and twenty thousand, shall not practice as an attorney or counselor in any court of record in this State nor act as referee in any action or proceeding.”

While the fact, that from the provision as revised in 1925 the word hereafter ” is dropped, and thus the application of the exception from the inhibition therein contained is now made clear and definite, may have little weight in determining the meaning of the provision in question; but as such action is open to the deduction that the framers of the 1925 revision considered that such word

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Related

State Ex Rel. Nielson v. City of Gooding
266 P.2d 655 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1953)
Greenlund v. Fenner
219 A.D. 765 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
127 Misc. 295, 216 N.Y.S. 357, 1926 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenlund-v-fenner-nysupct-1926.