Opinion of Strong on the Powers of County Judges

3 How. Pr. 92
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 How. Pr. 92 (Opinion of Strong on the Powers of County Judges) 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
Opinion of Strong on the Powers of County Judges, 3 How. Pr. 92 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847).

Opinion

The material question raised in this case is, whether a county judge can execute at chambers the powers and duties of a justice of this court, which were conferred by statute passed previous to the adoption of the new constitution upon the judges of the then existing county courts of [93]*93the degree of counsellor in the supreme court ? Provisions were made by the Revised Statutes (vol. 1st, p. 87, § 3, andp. 98, § 15,) for the appointment of “ supreme court commissioners ” in most of the counties in .this state. There was no definition of their powers in either of those sections. That was given in the 18th section of the act relative to the powers and duties of certain judicial officers, (2d R. S., 209.) It is there enacted that supreme court commissioners duly appointed according to law shall severally be authorised and required to perform all the duties and to execute every power, act and trust which a justice of the supreme court may perform and execute out of court, according to the rules and practice of such court, and pursuant to the provisions of any statute, in all civil cases except as hereinafter provided.” This is the general grant of the powers of those officers. There are various limitations of such powers in the subsequent sections of the same act, and others were conferred upon them by several statutes, but neither has any bearing upon the present question. By the 32d section of the act which I have last quoted, it is provided that, “ every recorder of a city, and every judge of the county courts of any county being of the degree of counsellor of the supreme court, shall by virtue of their respective offices be supreme court commissioners, and shall be authorised and required to perform all the duties herein conferred, subject to all the provisions of this title.” The duties mentioned in the latter part of the section are doubtless those of supreme court commissioners, and not such as are conferred upon other officers, such as masters in chancery and notaries public, mentioned in other sections of the same title. The section last quoted, as I understand it, does not confer the power in question upon the judges of the county courts therein mentioned as such judges, but it constitutes them supreme court commissioners, and as such authorises them to perform those powers. If that is the true construction of the statute, the abolition of the office would necessarily annihilate its powers in all cases—the county judges would no longer be supreme court commissioners, nor (as the superstructure could not exist without the foundation) could they perform the duties of the office. It appears to me that the abolition of the office in those who held it by express appointment must also abolish it with those who held it incidentally, (ex officio.) There is no reason why it should not have that effect in this instance, but the contrary—the number of the latter was greater than of the former—and the probability was that those who had been appointed expressly to the office would be better qualified to discharge its duties than those who held it merely as an incident to another office in an inferior court. But the 8th section of the 14th article of the new [94]*94constitution expressly abolishes loth offices after the first Monday of July last. Of course all the provisions of the several statutes relative to the powers and duties of those officers which were in existence at the time of the adoption of the constitution were virtually repealed. There could be no duties nor powers where there could be no officers to perform them. The office of supreme court commissioner was not revived in any shape by the new constitution. The convention was induced to abolish it altogether probably from two considerations, first, the great number of those officers which (notwithstanding the conceded professional ability and worth of many of them) prevented any uniformity of practice; and secondly, the increased number and diversified places of residence of the justices of the court, which would enable them to perform the necessary duties at their own chambers. There may be some inconvenience both to the judges and the profession from confining those numerous duties to a number still quite limited, but possibly the advantages resulting from a diminution of the number of those chamber orders, many of which were very vexatious, and the preservation of a much greater uniformity of practice, may compensate for such inconvenience. It is said that the argument from the abolition of the office proves too much, as the office of justice of the supreme court was also abolished, and, from a parity of reasoning, the powers of the office would not have devolved upon the justices of the existing supreme court. Probably the legislature entertained that opinion, as they deemed it necessary to provide expressly, as they have done by the 16th section of the new judiciary act, that the new supreme court should possess the same powers as were exercised by the late supreme court, and that the new justices should also possess the same powers and exercise the same jurisdiction which were possessed and exercised by the justices of the former courts. Whether the constitution (Art. 6, § 3) by conferring general jurisdiction in law and eguity upon the supreme court did not render a portion of the provisions of the statute last quoted a matter of supererogation, it is not necessary to inquire. It is sufficient for me to say now, that if it was necessary to revive the powers possessed by the justices of the late supreme court, that has been expressly done, and the new justices possess such powers if not by the provisions of the hew constitution, certainly by legislative enactment in accordance with that instrument. The existing county judges hold a new office, created by the constitution, and can only possess and exercise the powers which it confers, or which have been granted by the legislature pursuant to its provisions. The constitution ordains (Art. 6, § 14) that they shall hold the county courts, and perform the duties of the office [95]*95of surrogate, and with two justices hold the courts of sessions, and perform such other duties as may be required by law, and that the legislature may confer equity jurisdiction in special cases upon them. If any of the powers of the judges of the old county courts are conferred upon them, they were such only as related to holding the county courts and courts of sessions. There is no pretence that the constitution expressly or impliedly conferred upon them the powers of supreme court commissioners. If they possess such powers they must have been conferred upon them by the legislature subsequently to the adoption of the constitution. It is not to be lightly inferred that the legislature intended to revive an office which had been so lately abolished by the framers of our organic law. Had they intended to do that, their language should, and doubtless would have been clear and explicit. It is conceded that the judiciary act does not in terms confer the power in question, but it has been supposed that it has been granted by necessary implication.

It is said that to retain the jurisdiction of a supreme court commissioner it was not necessary to retain the office by that name, since the duties of it has long been devolved on another class of officers. I have already anticipated the answer to this position. The duties were devolved upon this class of officers, as supreme court commissioners, and. besides this class of officers the court has itself been abolished. True, a provision was adopted for the election of a new officer with some similar power, but not all of them, and certainly not those now in question.

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3 How. Pr. 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-of-strong-on-the-powers-of-county-judges-nysupct-1847.