Heath v. Hubbell

6 Daly 183
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 6, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Daly 183 (Heath v. Hubbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heath v. Hubbell, 6 Daly 183 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Joseph F. Daly, J.

This action, brought to recover damages laid at $20,000, for slander, was originally commenced in the Superior Court of the city of Hew York, and issue joined therein. Plaintiff made a motion in that court on March 2, 1874, for an order sending the cause to the Marine Court for trial. Defendant did not appear to oppose the motion, and upon proof of due service of notice of the motion upon him, an <order was made on that day that the action “ being for slander, be, and the same hereby is, transferred to the Marine Court for [184]*184trial, as provided by the statute.” The action was brought on. for trial in the Marine Court, on May 8, 1814, the plaintiff appearing by his attorney and his counsel, and the defendant appearing in person and by his attorney and counsel. No objection was made by defendant to the jurisdiction of the court, nor to proceeding with the trial on any ground. Trial of the issues was had, witnesses were called On both sides, plaintiff and defendant testified in their own behalf, the cause was summed up by both sides, and given to the jury, after the charge, who returned a verdict for plaintiff for $7,000. No motion was made-for a new trial. At no stage of the proceedings, either before- or after verdict, was the jurisdiction of the court questioned, nor its authority to proceed with the trial under the order transferring the action from the Superior Court. The judgment was; affirmed at general term of the Marine Court, and from that affirmance the appeal is now taken.

The first question presented is that of jurisdiction.

The transfer of the cause from the Superior Court to the-Marine Court was ordered pursuant to the Marine Court Act of 1872 (L. 1872, ch. 629, § 3, sub. 12), which reads as follows: “ Any other court of record in the city and county of New York shall have power, by an order to be entered by its direction on its minutes, to send any action of libel, slander, assault, battery, criminal- conversation, seduction, malicious prosecution, or false imprisonment, pending, or that may hereafter be brought in said courts of record, after issue has been joined therein, to-the said Marine Court for trial, and a certified copy of such order shall be delivered to and filed with the clerk of the said Marine Court, and entered by him in its minutes, and thereupon the said Marine Court of the city of New York shall have immediate and exclusive jurisdiction of such action, and the said jurisdiction of the said court, as to the amount of the recovery in such action, costs and additional allowances therein, shall, for the purposes of said action, be the same, and as full and comprehensive as that of the court from whence the same proceeds.”

In the ease of Hart v. Hatch (6 N. Y. Supm. Ct. Rep. 186),. the general term of the Supreme Court of this district, upon an appeal from an order of that court removing a cause in that. [185]*185court to the Marine Court under this statute, against the wish and objection of the defendant in such cause, decided that the court had no power to make such transfer, and reversed the order.

In the case of Alexander v. Bennett, the Court of Appeals (60 N. Y. 204), upon an appeal from an order of the Supreme Court removing a cause from that court, under the act of 1874 (ch. 545, § 4), an act containing a general provision for transfer of cases from courts of record to the Marine Court for trial,, where the defendant had also objected to the order of removal, decided that the court had no power to make such order.

The decision, in both of these cases, was put upon the express ground that one of the parties to the cause removed had objected to and opposed the order of removal, and that the Supreme Court had no power to divest itself of jurisdiction and refuse to try the cause and send it for trial to another court,, against the wish of the litigants, or any of them. The Court of Appeals declares the exercise of its own jurisdiction by the court in which the action is pending, is the constitutional right of the parties, and intended for their benefit, and it is the duty of the court to exercise it and adjudicate the controversy. But the court farther declares that “if the statute had required the consent of the parties to the action, as well as the court, to the transfer of jurisdiction over it to another court, a different question would be presented.” And the Supreme Court, in the case cited, declares that “if both parties had consented, an entirely different case would be presented, for even a constitutional right may be surrendered by consent.”

It would seem, from these decisions, that the legislature has. the power to make such a provision for the transfer of causes, if it be made dependent upon the consent of the parties to the litigation ; and if the statutes authorizing the removal may be read as containing a proviso that the order transferring the cause shall be made with the consent of the parties, they would not be unconstitutional. I am of opinion, under the decisions, that the statutes should he so read and construed.

In the case of Embury v. Connor (3 N. Y. 511), the constitutionality of a legislative provision (L. 1813, ch. 179), concern[186]*186ing the taking of private property for public use, was in question. The statute provided that where a part only of a lot was required for the public use, leaving the residue of the same lot belonging to the same owners to whom the portion required belonged, and the commissioners of estimate and assessment thought proper to include such residue in their estimate and assessment, the whole lot should, on confirmation of their report, become vested in the corporation. This provision, as it stood literally, was declared unconstitutional in the Matter of Albany Street (11 Wend. 148), and Taylor v. Porter (4 Hill, 147), because it authorized the taking of private property not intended nor required for the public use; but it was said that if the provision were merely intended to give the corporation capacity to take, with the consent of the owner, it would be unobjectionable. In Embury v. Connor, the direct question was involved whether the statute might be so read as to contain a proviso that the owner consent, and the court decided that it might, and that the statute should be let in to operate as if it contained such a ■provision. In that case the consent of the owners to the taking -of such residue of their lot was found, not upon any written instrument under their hands, hut upon recitals in the commissioner’s report, upon affidavits filed with the report, showing that the owners had appeared before the commissioners and urged the taking by the corporation of the whole lot, and finally that they had accepted the award made for it.

As it is the duty of the court to construe all legislative enactments so as to give effect to them, and not conclude them to be unconstitutional because a literal reading would indicate that they violated some principle of the organic law, the better -opinion would be that this provision of the Marine Court Act authorizing the transfer, of causes from other courts, should be read as containing a provision that such transfer should be made upon, or with the consent of the parties to the action, and not -otherwise. It is no arbitrary exercise of power to construe the act as including a provision making its operation depend upon the consent of the parties interested, since without their consent it is wholly inoperative and harmless, and they may surrender .any constitutional right by consent.

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Related

Gates v. . Preston
41 N.Y. 113 (New York Court of Appeals, 1869)
Embury v. . Conner
3 N.Y. 511 (New York Court of Appeals, 1850)
Alexander v. . Bennett
60 N.Y. 204 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Briggs v. . Bergen
23 N.Y. 162 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)
Landers v. . Staten Island R.R. Co.
53 N.Y. 450 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Maltby v. Greene
1 Keyes 548 (New York Court of Appeals, 1864)
Coffin v. Coffin
4 Mass. 1 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1808)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Daly 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-v-hubbell-nyctcompl-1875.