Hartman v. Spencer

5 How. Pr. 135
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 How. Pr. 135 (Hartman v. Spencer) 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
Hartman v. Spencer, 5 How. Pr. 135 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1850).

Opinion

Selden, Justice.

Whether a motion to change the place of trial can be made before the issues in the cause are settled, is a question of much practical importance, and one upon which the decisions are conflicting.

It has recently received an elaborate examination by Justices Willard of the fourth, and Sill of the eighth district, who have come to opposite conclusions: the former having held in the case of Schenck vs. McKie, (4 How. Pr. R. 246), that the settled [136]*136practice prior to the Code, which required motions to change the venue to be made before issue, was equally applicable to motions under the Code to change the place of trial; "and the latter having decided at a general term, with the concurrence of his three associates in the eighth district, that the motion must under the provisions of the Code, be postponed until the issues are joined (Mixen vs. Kuhn, 4 How. 409).

This last case being the most recent, as well as the only one reported in which the question has been passed upon at a general term, I should for these reasons alone, be disposed to follow it. But the conflicting views entertained upon the question, and the fact that the practice is still unsettled, and differs in different, districts, have induced me to look into the subject with some care for the purpose of satisfying my own mind as to its real merits; and while from this examination I am led to concur in the reasoning of Mr. Justice Sill, I also think that another line of argument may be pursued, which will serve to make the accuracy of his conclusion still more clear.

By the common law and the practice of the English courts there were two distinct and separate modes of obtaining a trial, in a different county from that in which the venue was first laid. In transitory actions it might be accomplished by changing the venue, on motion, to the county in which a trial was desired; thus incidentally controlling the place of trial through the operation of the rule which required the venue to be issued, to the" county where the venue was laid.

This practice was first introduced by the judges as a substitute for that of a traverse of the venue to be tried by a jury, in order to avoid the inconvenience and delay of the latter mode; and' applied originally only to actions which were local, or which, although transitory by the common law, had been rendered quasi local by certain old English statutes.

It began, however, at an early day to be used for the purpose of securing a trial in actions purely transitory, in the county where the witnesses principally resided (Foster vs. Taylor, 1 Term R. 776; Watt vs. Daniel, 1 Bos. & Pul. 425).

[137]*137But in actions which were local the venue, if laid in the proper county, could not be changed If, therefore, in such an action, it became necessary for any reason, as to obtain an impartial trial, that the place of trial should be changed, it was accomplished in a different mode; to wit, by a suggestion upon the record that a fair and impartial trial could not be had in the county where the venue was laid, with a nient dedire, as it was called; that is an order by default or nil dicit, that the venue issue to an adjoining county.

From the form of this entry' it is obvious that it was first adopted in cases where it appeared from the record itself, either that justice required the place of trial to be changed, or where all the jurors within the visue, were interested, or that the venire must necessarily be awarded to another county, as where the venue was laid in Wales, to which the venire did not run.

But the same form was afterwards used where it was shown by evidence dehors the record, that it was necessary to send the case to another county in order to secure an impartial trial. The practice in such case was, on presenting the facts by affidavit to the court to obtain a rule to show cause why the party should not be at liberty to enter the usual suggestion with a nient dedire, upon the roll; and if sufficient cause was not shown the rule was made absolute and tbe suggestion entered (Rex vs. Harris 3. Burr. 1330).

These two modes of changing the place of trial were entirely distinct from each other. . Lord Mansfield, in the case last cited, says:

“ No two1 things can be more difficult than changing the venue and continuing it as it was, with such a suggestion upon the roll as is now proposed.”

The latter mode was applicable to actions whether transitory or local; while the former could only be used in those which were transitory; except where in a local action the venue was aid in a wrong county.

Motions to change the venue might always have been made before issue joined: and ultimately this came to be required, for [138]*138the purpose of avoiding delay; but a suggestion upon the roll by which the trial was transferred to a county other than that where the venue was laid, could not be entered until the pleadings were closed.

This suggestion embraced an award of the venire, which could not be made until the cause was in readiness for trial.

With this brief review of the practice of the English courts transplanted into and adopted by our own, we are prepared fully to comprehend the various provisions of the Revised Statutes (2 R. S. 409, §2), on the subject of venues.

The first and second subdivisions of this section simply declare what actions shall be local. The third subdivision, which provides for the trial of transitory actions, in the first place expressly enacts the rule of the common law, requiring causes to be tried in the county where the venue is laid; and then it authorizes the court, when necessary for the convenience of parties or witnesses or for the purposes of a fair and impartial trial, to order the issues to be tried in some other county.

This provision, it will be seen, did not contemplate any change of venue; that was to remain as before. It did not confer any new power upon the court; certainly so far as the object of securing a fair and impartial trial was concerned; but it contemplated an application of this mode of changing the place of trial, by direct order instead of incidentally through a change of venue, to cases in which it had not in practice been, at least extensively used; that is, where the object was to promote the convenience of witnesses.

The last clause of the section then gives to the court the power to change the venue in all cases, whether local or transitory for the purpose of securing an impartial trial. Now this clause introduced a substantial change into the law. As we have before seen, if in a local action it became necessary prior to this statute, to change the place of trial for the purposes of impartial justice, it could only be done by an entry upon the record; but this clause puts such actions upon the same footing with those which are transitory.

[139]*139The effect of these provisions, taken together was, to break up the distinctions which previously existed, in practice, between transitory and local actions in regard to the mode of obtaining a change in the place where they were to be tried.

It is obvious, I think, that the provision for effecting the desired change by direct order, without a change of venue, was in substance a statutory adoption of the English practice before referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
5 How. Pr. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartman-v-spencer-nysupct-1850.