People ex rel. Attorney General v. Mayor of New-York

25 Wend. 9
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 25 Wend. 9 (People ex rel. Attorney General v. Mayor of New-York) 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
People ex rel. Attorney General v. Mayor of New-York, 25 Wend. 9 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1840).

Opinion

The following opinion was delivered in the supreme court:

By the Court,

Bronson, J.

It is unnecessary to refer particularly to the ancient charters of the city, or to the several statutes passed by the colonial and state legislatures, conferring judicial powers upon the mayor and aider-men of the city of New-York. As there is no controversy upon that point, it is sufficient to say, that for more than a century immediately preceding the time of filing this information, the mayor and aldermen, of the city of New-York have been authorized by law to exercise, and have in fact exercised all the judicial powers which they now claim. They have been judges or members of the mayor’s court, afterwards called the court of common pleas and the court of general sessions of the peace in and for the city and county of New-York, which are the only county courts ever authorized to be held in that county. They have also been members of the court of oyer [ *11 ] and terminer and justices of the peace, with larger *powers than were ever conferred on justices of the peace in other counties. Since the present constitution was adopted in 1822, most, if not all, of their former powers have been recognized and confirmed by the legislature. I will only refer to such of these enactments as have an immediate bearing upon the question before us. On the revision of the laws in 1830, the mayor and aldermen were declared judges of the court of common pleas, and power was given them, in conjunction with other officers, to hold courts' of general sessions of the peace and of oyer and teminer. 2 R. S. 215, § 22, p. 216 § 27, and p. 204, § 28. I need not notice other statutes, because it was not denied on the argument that the defendants are entitled to all the privileges which they claim, if the legislature had power to make the grant.

[11]*11The attorney general has filed this information on the ground, and he insists, that the charter of 1780, and the statutes prior to 1822, conferring judicial powers upon the mayor and aldermen of the city of Hew-York, were abrogated by the constitution; and that the subsequent enactments on the same subject are repugnant to that instrument, and consequently void. He relies mainly on that clause of the constitution which provides that “ the governor shall nominate by message in writing, and with the consent of the senate shall appoint, all judicial officers, except justices of the peace,” art. 4, § 7; and the argument is, that the major and aldermen of the city of Hew-York are “judicial officers and as they are not appointed by the governor and senate, but elected by the people, they cannot exercise the judicial powers which the legislature has attempted to confer upon them.

It is ivorthy of remark, that although eighteen years have elapsed since the adoption of the constitution, during all which time the defendants and their predecessors in office have continued to exercise the various judicial powers conferred upon them by law, yet no one has ever before thought of raising the question which is now presented for our consideration. Within that period our statutes have undergone a thorough revision by eminent jurists; the lives, liberty and property of many individuals have been at stake in courts *where the mayor and aldermen have sat in judgment; [ *12 ] and yet neither revisers nor legislators, judges nor counsel, defendants nor criminals, seem ever to have doubted the validity of the laws which are now said to be repugnant to the constitution. This consideration may justly be regarded as proving something in favor of the title which the defendants set up. But it is never too late to appeal to the fundamental law; and I shall therefore consider the question in the same manner as though it had been presented immediately after the adoption of the constitution.

The short answer to this supposed constitutional difficulty is, that the mayor and aldermen of the city of Hew-York are not “ judicial officers,” and consequently the seventh section of the fourth article of the constitution has nothing to do with the case. They are legislative and executive officers ; and although in addition to their more appropriate duties, certain judicial powers have been cast upon them, they are not, in the proper sense of the term, “judicial officers.” The constitution speaks in technical language of a well known class of public officers, and there is nothing to indicate an intention to include those belonging to any other department of the government. It speaks only of a single class, and not of officers who may be ranked under more than one class. It does not say that officers whose duties are both executive and judicial, shall be appointed by the governor and senate, but only that judicial officers shall be so appointed. It does not speak of judicial powers, hut of judicial officers.

The framers of the constitution were, in the fourth article, settling the [12]*12mode of appointment and election to offices. They were distributing the powers which had before been exercised by the council of appointment. When they came, in the seventh section, to speak of “ judicial officers,” they evidently had in view the chancellor, justices of the supreme court, circuit and county judges, surrogates and other officers properly belonging to the same department of the government. This is not only apparent from the words which they used, but it is further proved by the excep- [ *13 ] tion which they *made of “justices of the peace,” who are strictly “ judicial officers.”

The whole argument against the title of the defendants is based on the assumption, that every person who exercises judicial powers, is a “judicial officer,” within the meaning of the constitution. The attorney general must necessarily go this length, before he can bring the defendants, who are properly legislative and executive officers, within the influence of the seventh section of the fourth article. This construction not only goes beyond the just import of the language of the constitution, but it will bring the seventh section into direct and necessary conflict with other portions of the same instrument. Indeed it will, I think, go very,far towards upsetting the whole frame of the government; for there are few officers in the state, from the highest to the lowest, who do not sometimes exercise judicial powers. I will only mention a few cases, by way of example, where officers, who are not appointed by the governor and senate, have been vested with judicial powers. Among the number of executive officers who exercise such powers, the governor, secretary of state, comptroller, treasurer, attorney-general and surveyor-general, must all be included. Sheriffs act judicially in executing writs of inquiry, coroners in holding inquests, and clerks of courts in assessing damages'. Commissioners of highways exercise judicial powers in laying out roads; assessors and trustees of school districts, in making their assessment rolls ; commissioners of deeds, in judging of the proofs made before them ; and fence viewers, in appraising damages. And then we have legislative officers, who are also vested with judicial powers. The senators sit in the court for the trial of impeachments and the correction of errors ; and the lieutenant -governor, who, like the defendants, isboth a legislative and an executive officer, presides and dispenses justice in the court of last resort.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Wend. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-attorney-general-v-mayor-of-new-york-nysupct-1840.