In re the Attachment of Taylor

40 A. 691, 62 N.J.L. 131, 33 Vroom 131, 1898 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 13, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 40 A. 691 (In re the Attachment of Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Attachment of Taylor, 40 A. 691, 62 N.J.L. 131, 33 Vroom 131, 1898 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 78 (N.J. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

This is a rule to show cause why the respond-_ ents should not be attached as for a contempt of this court [132]*132for resisting, interfering with or destroying a writ of certiorari. The writ was addressed to Thaddeus P. Varney, clerk of the city of Camden, and directed him to certify and send to the Supreme Court the resolution by which the city council of the city of Camden proposed to unseat the prosecutor. The said Varney, although duly served with the said writ, was prevented from obeying its mandate. The question with respect to these respondents is so concisely stated by their counsel, in his supplementary brief, that its opening paragraphs will be cited verbatim:

“ In order to appreciate the force of the testimony in this case, it is necessary to know the situation as it existed when the writ of certiorari was brought into the council chamber. The order of the proceedings was as follows: The newly-elected members of council were sworn in ; George B. Taylor, one of the respondents, was elected president; the Rev. Dr. Haudley offered prayer; thereupon, Harry C. Kramer, another of the respondents, was elected clerk. E. G. C. Bleakly was appointed the legal adviser of the city; the acting city clerk, Thaddeus P. Varney, refused to administer the official oath to Mr. Bleakly. Councilman Silvers then offered a resolution to strike the name of John S. Roberts from the roll and add the name of Dr. Shafer. This resolution, with the election returns from the Third ward, was sent to the clerk’s desk to be read. The reading was tedious, and the audience became restless and noisy; there were laughing and talking in the gallery and on the floor of the chamber; some were denouncing what they characterized as an attempt on the part of the old council to steal the seat of Mr. Hatch; others were criticising the action of Mr. Varney in refusing to administer the oath of office to My. Bleakly; others were complaining of what they described as Mr. Varney’s dilatory tactics. During the reading of the returns there was disclosed an error in the date of one certificate, whereupon someone in the audience exclaimed,-‘Another Varney trick!’ At or about this time, Councilman Sayrs, who was standing in the open space in front of the clerk’s desk, was seen to move [133]*133hastily toward the door through which Mr. Snyder came with the writ of certiorari; as they met, Mr. Snyder said to Mr. Sayrs, ‘ Get this to the clerk’s desk as quickly as possible.’ Instantly there were cries, in at least one section of the room, ‘Don’t let him read it,’ ‘Stop him,’ ‘Put him out.’ As Mr. Sayrs advanced to the clerk’s desk, he said, ‘A writ from the Supreme Court.’ Mr. "Varney took the writ, turned toward the presiding officer, and said, ‘ Mr. President, a writ of certiorari from the Supreme Court,’ to which it is claimed the president replied, ‘Proceed with the regular order of business.’ Thereupon, according to the testimony of Mr. "Varney, he said, ‘ Mr. President, a writ of certiorari from the Supreme Court, signed by Justice Garrison and "William Riker, clerk.’
“Here arises the first and most important question in this case: Did either of the three respondents, Taylor, Kramer and Hatch, hear these announcements ? Did they hear what Sayrs said to the clerk? Did they hear what the clerk said to the presiding officer? Were they duly apprised of the fact that there was a writ of certiorari in the council chamber?”

In addition to this very accurate description, it is well that the causes that led up to the allowance of the writ of certiorari and the manner of its procurement be briefly stated : The two factions spoken of in the proofs as the “ Republican party” and the “Committee of One Hundred” had been opposed to each other at the municipal election a year previously. At this election Roberts was the candidate of the former and Shafer of the latter party. Roberts was returned elected by the board of canvassers, but, upon proceedings taken under the Werts Election law, that election was set aside and a new one ordered. At this election, Shafer, who was practically the only candidate, was declared elected and came to city council with his certificate thus obtained. The Republicans, having a working majority of city council, declared Roberts to be duly elected, by virtue of the power conferred by the charter of the city of Camden upon council, to be the judge of the election of its own members. A year later, when the Committee of One Hundred carried twelve of [134]*134the nineteen members of council, the first action it proposed to itself was the dropping of the name of Roberts from the roll of members and the substitution of that of Shafer, but the case of Kendell v. City of Camden, 18 Vroom 64, having decided that the power of city council thus to judge of the election of a member was exhausted by a single exercise of it, counsel for Roberts, Henry M. Snyder, applied to the main branch of the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari to remove into that court any motion or resolution that might be offered tending to unseat Roberts. This application was refused by the court upon the ground that there was no proof of the proposed violation of the prosecutor’s rights. Counsel was, however, informed by the court that, upon furnishing such proof, the allocatur could be had. This was the juncture of affairs that immediately preceded the scene described in the brief of counsel for the respondents, cited above, to which should be added that the resolution to unseat Roberts had been canvassed among the Committee of One Hundred, decided upon by its leaders and somewhat elaborately prepared in advance, showing that it was deemed to be the thing of paramount political importance at the meeting about to be held. It was this resolution that was being read when the writ of certiorari was served upon Clerk Varney, it was this resolution the reading of which was insisted upon notwithstanding the service of the writ upon the clerk, and it was apparently for the clerk’s failure to ignore the writ and to continue reading this resolution that he was assaulted, forced from his desk and driven from the room, his place as clerk being taken by one of these respondents; and yet, after order had been restored, the reading of this resolution was never continued, nor was there, according to the respondents’ testimony, any renewal whatsoever of the purpose to pass the motion that had been so conspicuously rife prior to the service of the writ.

This circumstance, which is entirely uncontradicted and is practically unexplained, is consistent with no other theory than that the service of the paper upon Varney was in some [135]*135way responsible for this sudden change of policy, for, after the confusion incident upon the assault upon the clerk had subsided — during which Mr. Hatch, who had been a member of council, caused himself to be sworn in as mayor — a vote was taken to fill the vacancy in city council thus occasioned.

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Bluebook (online)
40 A. 691, 62 N.J.L. 131, 33 Vroom 131, 1898 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-attachment-of-taylor-nj-1898.