In re Seeley

114 Misc. 633
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 114 Misc. 633 (In re Seeley) 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
In re Seeley, 114 Misc. 633 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Stephens, J.

At the opening of the argument, the county clerk announced through his counsel that he is an indifferent party to the proceeding and would yield submissively without contention to whatever directions might be given in the premises.

The board of supervisors, however, appeared by counsel in defense of its action that has given cause for this controversy.

This application challenges the validity of a resolution of the board of supervisors of Seneca county passed August 30, 1920, abolishing the two jury districts into which the county was divided by chapter 127 of the Laws of 1822 and providing that thereafter the county shall consist of a single jury district; the resolution further provided for holding all trial terms of all courts of record at the courthouse in the village of Waterloo and a method by which the existing ballots of grand and trial jurors respectively of the two jury districts should be combined and that such jurors should thereafter be drawn from the entire body of the county.

Two lists of grand jurors and two lists of trial jurors to attend a term of the Supreme Court, appointed to be held at the courthouse in Waterloo on March 7,1921, have been prepared by the county clerk; one list of grand jurors and one list of trial jurors [635]*635consists of names drawn from the north jury district boxes, and another list of grand jurors and one of trial jurors consists of names drawn from the combined ballots of the two jury districts; it is the position of the applicant here that the persons whose names were drawn from the north jury district constitute the only legal grand and trial jury respectively.

It is necessary, therefore, to determine whether or not the board of supervisors had authority to consolidate the two existing jury districts into one and our inquiry leads to an examination into the origin of the two shire system that has prevailed in Seneca county for nearly a century and the sources of the power which the board of supervisors claim justly to have used in abrogating it.

The county of Seneca was carved out of the county of Cayuga by chapter 31 of the Laws of 1804 and it was enacted that the two terms of the Courts of Common Pleas and General Sessions of the Peace shall be holden at the meeting house on lot number thirty in the Town of Ovid until further legislative aid in the premises.” The sum of $1,000 was authorized to be raised by taxation to build a courthouse and jail within a specified area in the town of Ovid, and commissioners were named to superintend the building of them; the legislature in 1805 by chapter 132 of that year authorized the commissioners to place the buildings on any part of lot No. 3 not exceeding fifty rods west of the limits described in the former act, appropriated $1,000 additional for the purpose, and declared that it should be lawful for the above mentioned courts to adjourn the next term of court from the meeting house to the house of John Seely on lot No. 3; more moneys were later directed to be raised to complete the structures, $1,500 in 1806 and $2,000 in 1807 (Laws of 1806, chap. 146; Laws of 1807, chap. 142); by the latter act [636]*636the number of terms of court was increased to three to be held “ at the courthouse, in said county.”

The ¡Revised Laws of 1813, chapter 65, provides that the Courts of Common Pleas and G-eneral Sessions of the Peace should be held in the county of Seneca at the courthouse of said county on the second Tuesday of May and on the first Tuesday of October and February.

A courthouse and jail were authorized to be built in the village of Waterloo in the town of Junius by chapter 189 of the Laws of 1817; commissioners were appointed by that act to superintend the erection of the buildings and the board of supervisors was required to raise the sum of $4,000 for the enterprise; it was further enacted that when the courthouse was suitable for occupancy it should be the duty of the courts to adjourn from the courthouse at Ovid to the one in Waterloo, and that prisoners should be removed from the jail at the latter place to the new jail when ready and that the courthouse and jail so to be erected-in the village of Waterloo should thenceforth be the courthouse and jail of the county of Seneca; the board of supervisors was authorized to dispose of the buildings at Ovid after the new ones had been constructed in Waterloo.

We come now to the consideration of the embarrassing statute, chapter 137 of the Laws of 1822.

It was provided in that act that the several courts thereafter to be held in Seneca county should be held alternately in the courthouse in the town of Ovid and the courthouse in the town of Junius and that there should be two jury districts in the county, the towns comprising each being named in the statute; it was further enacted that it shall not be lawful for the supervisors to sell the courthouse at Ovid or the lot on which it stands.

[637]*637Many of the statutes referred to have no very vital relation to our problem but have been mentioned in order to emphasize that we have thus far been dealing with the period in the history of the state when the legislature was concerned with the minute details of county government and regulation of county business; the exercise of these governmental functions was transferred from the state legislature to the local legislative bodies by the Constitution and appropriate legislation under it; by the Constitution of 1846, amended in 1874, the legislature was deprived of the power that it had theretofore exercised in this respect and it was prohibited from passing any private or local bill, Locating or changing county seats,” or “ Selecting, drawing, summoning, or empaneling, grand or petit jurors.” Const. 1846, as amd. 1874, art. Ill, § 18. In our present constitution the same provisions are found at the like numbered article and section.

When the right to regulate local municipal governments in certain specified particulars was taken away from the legislature by the constitutional provisions the same sovereign power that deprived it of that right imposed upon it the duty to confer upon the boards of supervisors of the several counties of the state, by general laws, such further powers of local legislation and administration as the legislature may from time to time prescribe or deem expedient. Const. 1846, art III, § 17; Amendt. 1874, art. Ill, § 23; Const. 1894, art. Ill, § 27.

Pursuant to the mandate of the Constitution the legislature has from time to time conferred such further powers upon the boards of supervisors; among other general powers thus conferred is that “ To make one or more jury districts and to make such regulations in respect to the holding of terms of courts as [638]*638shall be necessary by reason of such change.” 'County Law, § 12, subd. 14.

The ancestry of the above quoted extract from the County Law can be briefly traced; the identical language makes its initial appearance in chapter 570, Laws of 1881, which act apparently contains the first definite authorization of boards of supervisors to fix the number of jury districts, and constitutes subdivision 14, section 12 of the County Law of 1892 (chap. 686); a portion of the quoted language “ to make such regulations in respect to the holding of (the) terms of courts as shall be necessary by reason of such change ” appears, however, in chapter 482, Laws of 1875, not in any relation to any change in jury districts but in relation to a change in the location of a county courthouse.

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Bluebook (online)
114 Misc. 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-seeley-nysupct-1921.