Lynch v. Mosher

4 How. Pr. 86
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 How. Pr. 86 (Lynch v. Mosher) 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
Lynch v. Mosher, 4 How. Pr. 86 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

1. The defendant was bound, before issue joined, to have demanded in writing that the trial should be had in Rensselaer county. (Code, section 126.)

2. The defendant was bound to have given notice of his motion before issue joined. By the delay the plaintiff has lost a circuit.

8. The affidavit is defective as to the merits and as to the materiality of the witnesses. It states that the defendant believes his counsel has advised him truly on these subjects, and does not state that he believes he has a defence on the merits, nor that he believes his witnesses to be material.

Sill, Justice.—The power of this court to change the place of trial in transitory actions for the convenience of the witnesses and parties, was originally exercised by this court as an incident to its general jurisdiction, and I do not find that the exercise of this power in such actions was the subject of statutory provision until the Revised Statutes took effect in 1880. The change of the place of trial by an order of the court, did not necessarily require the venue to be changed. The books of practice and the Revised Statutes speak of the change for the convenience of parties and witnesses, as a change of the place of trial, and not a change of the venue. But as the parties stood prior to the passage of the Judiciary Act of 1847, the only practical effect of naming a venue in a declaration in a transitory action, was to indicate the county in which the trial was to be had; and the court adopted the practice of changing the venue as the method of changing the place of trial, where, for the convenience of parties and witnesses, the cause ought to be tried in a county other than that specified in the declaration. The distinction between a change of venue and a change of the place of trial in this class of cases, ceased to be important, and was practically lost sight of.

[88]*88This distinction, however, becomes substantial and important by the Judiciary Act of1847. The 46th section of that act, required the venue, when the parties resided in this state, to be laid in a county where one party resided, or an adjoining county. And if the venue was not so laid, the defendant, when serving an affidavit of merits, and notice of a motion before the time to plead had expired, was entitled "as a matter of course, to an order changing the venue to such county, with costs. A change of venue was granted only in cases where the plaintiff had laid it in a county other than that where a party resided or in an adjoining county; and a defendant, to .avail himself of this irregularity, must serve an affidavit of merits, and give notice of a motion to correct it before the time to plead expired, or the objection was waived.

The change of the place of trial as authorized by section 49, was a different proceeding, and did not carry with it a change of the venue, nor did the provision in section 46, requiring the motion to'change the venue to be noticed before the time to plead expired, have any application to a motion to change the place of trial under section 49. The time to make the latter motion was left to the practice as it stood before, or as it may have been affected by provisions of that act other than those found in section 46.

Sections 125 and 126 of the code, are substantially a re-enactment of section 46 of the Judiciary Act. The only changes wMch it is necessary now to notice being, that the code requires the venue to be laid in a county where a party resides; the words “ the county designated for that purpose in the complaint,” are used instead of the word “ venue.” And instead of providing for the service of an affidavit of merits and notice of motion to change the venue, the defendant must, before the time to plead expires, demand in writing that the trial be had in the proper county, that is, a county where a party resides.

The word venue, indeed, is not used in these sections, and perhaps was intentionally avoided; but its use has not been prohibited, nor its meaning change by any statute. It is a word as significant and appropriate as it has been, and under the code means the county specified in the complaint as the place of trial of the cause. Taking the liberty, then, of using this well-defined term for the words “place of trial” in section 125 and 126, and it will be readily seen that they are intended as a substitute for section 46 of the Judiciary Act, and designed solely to regulate the venue in the cause. Where a county in which a party resides is designated in the first instance, section 126 has no application. This section is designed to give the defendant his remedy when the plain[89]*89tiff has not laid his venue in the proper county. And in such case, the defendant, by serving the written demand, is entitled to have the trial in the proper county—that is, a county which is the residence of a party.

If my views are correct, section 126 has no reference whatever to a motion to change the place of trial for the convenience of witnesses or parties, but the sole object of that section is to point out the manner in which the defendant is to take advantage of the plaintiff’s irregularity when the venue is laid in the wrong county. The written demand required by that section, was neither necessary nor proper in this case, the venue having been laid in the county where the plaintiffs reside.

2d. It is objected that the defendant has been guilty of laches, in omitting to give notice of his motion before issue joined.

Prior to 1830, and before the enactment of any statute providing for the change of the place of trial in transitory actions, the rule was well settled that the defendant must embrace an opportunity, if one presented, to make his motion, which would not put the plaintiff over a circuit or a term. And he was required to move before issue joined, if waiting till after issue would have this effect. (Chapin v. De Groff, 4 Cow. 554.)

The Revised Statutes provided that issues of fact joined in the Supreme Court, in transitory actions, should be tried in the county where the venue was laid, unless the court should deem it necessary for the convenience of the parties and their witnesses, or for the purpose of a fair and impartial trial, “ to order such issues to he tried in some other county,” in which case they were to be tried in the county so designated. (2 R. S., 407.)

Under this statute the Supreme Court pursued the same practice which had previously prevailed, and required the defendant to move to change the place of trial before issue joined, if the delay till after issue would put the plaintiff over a circuit or term. (Lee v. Chapin, 11 Wend. 186.)

Then came the Judiciary Act of 1847, by the 49th section of which it is provided, that the Supreme Court shall have power “ to order any issue of fact joined in any suitto be tried in any county, on good cause shown therefor, and on such terms, and under such rules and regulations as the court shall prescribe. The code then provides that trials shall be had in the county where one of the parties reside, “subject, however, to the power of the court to change the place of trial in the cases provided hy statute. (Section 125.)

The code, it will be observed, does not undertake to define the cases in which the place of trial, (as distinguished from the venue) shall be changed, but leaves this question as it stood under former statutes. Its only effect is, to take from the court the exercise of this power as a part of their [90]*90general jurisdiction, and confine it to

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 How. Pr. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-mosher-nysupct-1849.