Lanning v. Carpenter

23 Barb. 402
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 Barb. 402 (Lanning v. Carpenter) 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
Lanning v. Carpenter, 23 Barb. 402 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

T. R. Strong, J.

The county of Schuyler, at the time of the entry of the judgment in the first case, had no legal exist[404]*404ence in respect to the jurisdiction of this court. The act to erect that county provides that for all purposes, except, among others, the jurisdiction of the supreme court, the territory particularly specified in it shall from and after the passage of the act, until after the next state census or enumeration, and thereafter for all purposes, be a separate and distinct county. (Laws of 1854, p. 913, § 6.) The judgment was entered prior to the census, and of course when the act as to the jurisdiction of this court was as though it had not been passed. If, therefore, the entry of the judgment required the exercise of the jurisdiction of the court, the judgment could not legally be entered in that county. So far as that jurisdiction was concerned, the judgment might as well have been entered in form in the office of a town clerk, or any private person.

The judgment in question was entered under the provisions of the code relating to the confession of judgments without action. (Code, §§ 382, 383, 384») The mode prescribed by those provisions for entering a judgment by confession, is, that a statement in writing to the effect particularly specified in § 383, must be made, signed by the defendant, and verified by his oath. That statement, by § 384, may be filed with a county clerk, who shall indorse upon it and enter in the judgment book, a judgment of the supreme court for the amount confessed, with $5 costs, together with disbursements. The statement and affidavit, with the judgment indorsed, by the same section, constitute the judgment roll, and executions on the judgment may be issued and enforced in the same manner as upon judgments in other cases in this court. Ho adjudication in fact by the court, nor the agency of any judge of the court, is required to warrant, or in entering the judgment. The legislature have prescribed the judgment, and directed the clerk to enter it. But the judgment is, by the express terms of § 384, a judgment of this court. It has manifestly all the qualities, incidents and attributes of other judgments, and is to be proceeded with, and upon, in like manner. It does not differ from any other judgment except in the mode of obtaining it. The court has full control over it as to amendments, and in all other respects, [405]*405as in the case of its other judgments. I do not perceive why such a judgment does not occupy the same footing, and is not in like manner, in legal contemplation and effect, a judicial final determination of the court in the exercise of its jurisdiction, as judgments on failure to answer under subdivision 1 of § 246 of the code. Judgments, under that subdivision, are entered by the agency of the plaintiff, and the clerk of the court, without any act otherwise of the court; and yet no one can doubt that such judgments are, in a legal view, the judicial action of the court in the performance of its functions.

By our present judicial system, the clerks of the several counties of the state are clerks of the supreme court; (Const, art. 6, § 19 ;) and, as such, each is to keep among the records of the court, a book for the entry of judgments, to be called the judgment book, in which the judgments of the court are to be entered. (Code, § 279.) Although it is not expressly declared that the duties to be performed by the county clerk in entering judgments by confession, are to be done by him as clerk of this court, it is obvious that they are required of him in that character, and as having, in that capacity, the judgment book in which the judgments are to be entered, and other records of the court. The clerk, as a ministerial officer of the court, in obedience to the law, which specifically prescribes the judgment, and dispenses with a special application to the court in such cases, enters the judgment of the court. The judgment is, by law, a judicial act of the court, recorded by its clerk. It seems to follow, that the provisions of § 384, as to the entry of judgments by confession, are only applicable to county organizations which are complete as to the jurisdiction of the court, as -well as for other purposes ; in which, as such, the court may pronounce judgment, and has a clerk to enter its judgments. Where the organization does not exist as to such jurisdiction, it is not easy to see how a judgment of the court can be entered which depends in any way upon that organization for its validity; nor is it plain, how a county clerk can be ex officio a clerk of the supreme court, in a county which is not organized as to such court. And how could an execution, which is [406]*406process of the court, depending upon its jurisdiction for vitality, be directed to the sheriff of a county which cannot be recognized by the court for the purpose of its jurisdiction.

The defect in the judgment in question, is not, that the court has not jurisdiction over the territory in the county of Schuyler, but that such jurisdiction can only be exercised under the county organizations which existed prior to the attempt to erect that county.

There are cogent reasons, relating to the validity of the act to erect the county of Schuyler, why it should not affect the jurisdiction of this court as it before existed, but as the act does not purport to do so, they need not be stated.

In my opinion the judgment could not be legally entered independent of the aid of the jurisdiction of this court; and for the foregoing reasons it is a nullity.

The motion to set aside the judgment and subsequent proceedings, must therefore be granted, with $ 10 costs.

E. Darwin Smith, J.

This motion was first made before me at the Steuben circuit, in January, 1856, when I declined to decide it, chiefly on the ground that it was doubtful whether my decision could in any way be reviewed.

The question of the validity of this judgment came before me again at special term in that county, on a motion to dissolve an injunction founded on the judgment; which motion I granted, and wrote thereupon the brief opinion which may be found in 12 Howard, 191, which opinion was prepared chiefly with the view to draw the attention of the public to the difficulties in the case, that they might be obviated during the sitting of the legislature then in session. The legislature having unfortunately adjourned without making any provision in respect to the exercise of the jurisdiction of this court in that county, the difficulties remain, and this motion being here renewed, we are obliged to decide it. As my brother Welles has come to conclusions upon the motion in which I cannot concur, and I am ignorant of the views of my brother Strong on the question, I have deemed it due to the importance of the case and the part I am called upon to take in its decision, to state the reasons for the conclusions to which Í [407]*407have come, more fully than they are contained in the brief opinion above referred to in Howard.

In proceeding to erect the new county of Schuyler the legislature was embarrassed, among other difficulties, with the several provisions of the constitution providing for the organization of judicial, senatorial and assembly districts. The territory proposed to be organized into the new county was embraced in two judicial, two senatorial, and at least three assembly districts.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Barb. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanning-v-carpenter-nysupct-1856.