Miller v. Stettiner

7 Bosw. 692
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMarch 9, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Bosw. 692 (Miller v. Stettiner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Stettiner, 7 Bosw. 692 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

—When this motion was made, 1 expressed some surprise that counsel had deemed a motion to set aside the process or proceedings in a cause, on the ground of misnomer of the defendant, warranted by any existing practice, and intimated that since I ¿ame to the bar I had [694]*694not known of such a motion. I was therefore surprised when my attention was called to the case of Elliott v. Hart, (1 How. Pr. R. 25,) in which such a motion 'was granted, and have been induced thereby to examine the subject.

For more than thirty-five years past, no such motion has been entertained -in this State, with the exception above referred to; and it was declared by Justice Woodworth of the Supreme Court, in 1825, that such a motion was without precedent in that court.

In Mann v. Carley and Chapin v. Carley, (4 Cow. 148,) the defendant was called in the capias by a wrong Christian name, and was declared against by his true name, and motions were made on his behalf to set aside the proceedings on that ground, and in one of the cases in which the defendant had not appeared before making his motion, the motion was granted. On that motion, the English cases and books of practice on the subject were very fully cited ; and the court, although the motions were novel, and without precedent in this State, and not of long ancient date in the English courts, and although the court disapproved of the practice, yet deemed it advisable to follow the English practice in the case then before them, deeming that practice, though modern, yet of sufficient antiquity to be binding in this State, until abrogated by some rule, order or decision on the subject. It would seem to me that the fact that the motion was in this State without precedent, and the practice disapproved, would have warranted the court then in saying it was evident that it had never been adopted in this State; or if it was the practice in England when the practice of their courts was' made the practice in the Supreme Court, it had gone into disuse"; or having never been used, had been already and long since abrogated. Be this as it may, the court took care that the practice should no longer exist; for, by an order made at the same term, they provided that in future the court will not entertain such a motion, but will leave the defendant to his plea in abatement.

By no action of the court, that I can discover, has the [695]*695practice enjoined by that order ever been changed; and from that time, February, 1825, until the present, I find no trace of any such motion, with the exception above referred to. Soon after the above order, it was provided by statute that when the name of any defendant shall not be known to the plaintiff, a capias ad respondendum may be issued against such person by a fictitious name. (2 R. S. p. 347, § 3.) Under this statute, it is clear that no motion to set aside the process on the ground of a misnomer of the defendant could be entertained; and unless this statute is repealed by a section of the -Code hereafter to be noticed, it' is still in force. Accordingly, it was said by the court in Waterbury v. Mather, (16 Wend. 613,) that if the parties are before the court, if all or any of them be misnamed, the only way to make the objection good is by plea in abatement; although if the misnamed defendant was not served, his codefendant might, under the system of practice then in use, take advantage of the variance between the proceedings and the proofs on the trial. And although the order of February, 1825, forbidding a motion to set aside the process, on the ground of misnomer of the defendant, does not appear to have been incorporated in the body of the written rules, afterwards from time to time promulgated, yet the practice conformed thereto; and the rules of 1829, adopted in October, to take effect January 1, 1830, (framed for the purpose of adapting the practice to the Revised Statutes, which then went into operation,) provide, in No. 72, that in cases not provided for by statute or these rules, the proceedings shall be according to the customary practice, as it has heretofore existed. It had become settled practice, originating in the disapproval of the court above stated, the absence of previous precedent in this State, and the order of February, 1825; and the language of the court in Waterbury v. Mather, in 1837, that “the only way to make the objection good, is by plea in abatement,” affirmed the practice as settled, although not embodied in the written rules. The revision of the rules made in 1845 do not, as [696]*696I perceive, contain any saving in terms of preexisting practice; but they cannot be deemed to abrogate a practice then long established, which was not dependent upon any court rule which was the subject of revision, any more than they should be regarded as abrogating the entire system of practice, a small portion of which was then to be found prescribed in the written body of rules in use. But in the revision of July, 1841, under the new Constitution and the judiciary act, it is expressly provided that, in cases not provided for by statute, nor those rules, the proceedings shall be -according to the customary practice as it has heretofore existed in the Supreme Court, in cases not provided for by statute or the written rules of the court, (No. 103.)

So that, down to the adoption of the Code of Procedure, no such motion as the present could be entertained. Such motions had been declared without precedent; had been disapproved, and, by express order of the court, pro-, hibited, and the practice had been settled and confirmed; and it is proper to add that, in the very case which constituted the solitary instance which had been before the court, and which led to the order of prohibition, the question may be regarded as one of variance between the declaration and the process, and not a naked case of misnomer of the defendant.. It was a case in which the plaintiff had sought to anticipate and avoid the effect of a plea in abatement, by declaring against the defendant by his true name.

The Code of Procedure took effect in 1848; and by section 389 of that Code, and again by section 469 of the Code of 1849, et seq., it is enacted that the practice of the courts in civil actions shall continue in force when consistent with the Code, subject to the power of the courts to alter, &c.; and the court, by the rules first adopted under the Code, August 4, 1849, reenact the former provision, that in cases not provided for, the former practice shall prevail, (No. 92;) and the same provision has been continued in each revision of the rules to the o present time. (Rule 93 of the present rules.)

[697]*697Unless, then, -the Code itself is, in its provisions, inconsistent with the order of February, 1825, that “the court will not entertain a motion to set aside the process or proceedings in a cause on the ground of a misnomer of the party arrested,” then the practice under that order still continues.

I perceive nothing in the Code inconsistent with the practice heretofore existing on this subject. A doubt is suggested in Eliott v. Hart, (ubi supra,) whether, under the Code, any remedy by plea in abatement now exists. I think the doubt is not warranted. The Code has not limited the defenses which a defendant may interpose.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Bosw. 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-stettiner-nysuperctnyc-1862.