People ex rel. Clark v. Adel

129 Misc. 82, 220 N.Y.S. 696, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 875
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 Misc. 82 (People ex rel. Clark v. Adel) 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. Clark v. Adel, 129 Misc. 82, 220 N.Y.S. 696, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 875 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Carswell, J.

Whatever is said with respect to the county judge of Queens county applies with equal force to the county judges of Kings and Richmond counties.

Independent research has been necessary to enable the court to pass upon the questions involved herein.

It is asserted that the respondent county judge is without power to act in such matters. The amendment to the State Constitution, article 6, section 11, containing a provision operative January 1, 1927, is invoked. It reads:

“ * * * From and after the first day of January in the second year following the adoption of this article, all the jurisdiction in civil actions or proceedings now vested in the County Courts [84]*84of the counties of Kings, Bronx, Queens and Richmond shall be withdrawn from such County Courts and vested in the City Court of the city of New York as constituted in and by section fifteen of this article, and said County Courts shall thereafter he vested with jurisdiction only in criminal prosecutions or proceedings as now or hereafter provided by law. County judges shall perform such duties as may be prescribed by law * *

It is asserted that this provision deprives the county judges as well as the County Court in the specified counties of all jurisdiction except in matters of criminal jurisdiction, and particularly that such specified county judges have no power to examine the accounts of committees of incompetents.

The constitutional provision has stripped the enumerated County Courts of all judicial jurisdiction in civil matters.

The respondent asserts that even if the County Court is without jurisdiction, he, as a county judge, still has the power to examine such accounts and inventories under section 1379 of the Civil Practice Act. That section reads: “ Annual examination of accounts and inventories. In the month of February of each year, the presiding judge of the court by which the committee of the property was appointed, or if he was appointed by the supreme court, the county judge of the county where the order appointing him is entered, must examine, or cause to be examined under his direction, all accounts and inventories filed by committees of the person and property since the first day of February of the preceding year. If it appears upon the examination that a committee appointed as prescribed in this article has omitted to file his annual inventory or accounting, or the affidavit relating thereto, as prescribed in the last section, or if the judge is of the opinion that the interests of the person with respect to whom the committee was appointed requires that he should render a more full or satisfactory inventory or account, the judge must make an order requiring the committee to supply the deficiency, and also, in his discretion, personally to pay the expense of serving the order upon him. An order so made may be entered and enforced, and the failure to obey it may be punished, as if it were made by the court. Where the examination of the accounts and inventories of committees of incompetent persons provided for. herein is made pursuant to the order or direction of a county judge, the expense of such examination as allowed by the county judge directing the • examination shall be payable by the county treasurer of the county out of .any court funds in his hands, upon the order of the county judge directing such examination.”

The claim that the constitutional provision does not strip the. [85]*85county judge as such of civil jurisdiction he formerly possessed under section 1379 of the Civil Practice Act can only be sustained by holding that the acts required of a county judge under that section are not judicial; merely administrative. If they are not administrative, then the right of the respondent to proceed under section 1379 cannot be sustained.

Examining into the situation that preceded the enactment of section 1379 of the Civil Practice Act may be helpful.

The jurisdiction over the person and property of incompetents, equitable in its character, vested in the Supreme Court in the first instance, as the successor to the Court of Chancery. (Matter of Andrews, 192 N. Y. 514.) This equitable jurisdiction was conferred on the County Court concurrently with the Supreme Court, by section 67, subdivision 4, of the Civil Practice Act and predecessor statutes. This concurrent jurisdiction in the County Court as a, court ended when the provision in the constitutional amendment contained in article 6, section 11, took effect on January 1, 1927. Over fifty years ago it was found that checking up was needed in advance of final accountings or even intermediate accountings, to avoid dissipation of property of incompetents, and that some agency should be required and authorized to inquire into such matters ex parte. Unless some such procedure were provided, the evil of dissipation of the estates of incompetents would occur in some instances, as a result of the discovery of the wrongful acts of committees being belated and committees meanwhile becoming partly, if not wholly, irresponsible financially.

This resulted in the Legislature enacting regulatory acts providing for an annual examination of accounts. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 1379, and predecessor acts.) These regulatory acts did not give to the Supreme Court any jurisdiction that it did not already possess. They merely outlined the procedure with respect to that jurisdiction and added to the means of its exercise. That procedure provided for the using of the county judge of the county where the order appointing the committee was entered to act as the agency of the Supreme Court to inquire into such accounts. The examination under section 1379 was not binding upon the incompetent or any one else (Matter of Arnold, 76 App. Div. 126), but merely furnished a means of checking up the committee in advance of the time for an accounting which would bind the incompetent and those otherwise interested.

What are the acts required under sections 1379 and 1380 of the Civil Practice Act? They are (a) examination of accounts; (b) the making of an order requiring an additional account; (c) rejection of items and surcharging an account; (d) punishing the committee [86]*86if he disobeys the order; (e) fixing and allowing expenses; (f) appointing a special guardian in proceedings for the removal of a committee; (g) passing upon the sufficiency or the circumstances of a cause for removal of a committee.

As the initial examination becomes or may become a part of these subsequent acts of the county judge, it may not be considered alone, but must be considered in conjunction with the foregoing to determine whether or not the duties required of the county judge or his appointee in the examination of accounts and inventories are judicial or administrative in their nature.

Whether an action or function is judicial or ministerial is to be determined by the nature or quality of the act itself and not by the character of the instrumentality authorized to perform it. A ministerial act contemplates the substantial excluding of the exercise of discretion or judgment by reason of the prescribing of what is to be done with such a degree of precision as to leave substantially nothing to discretion. A judicial act, however, contemplates the exercise of discretion or judgment founded upon or independent of a decision of fact. (34 C. J. 1178 et seq.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Schwarz v. General Aniline & Film Corp.
113 N.E.2d 533 (New York Court of Appeals, 1953)
People v. Tumen
161 Misc. 645 (New York Court of General Session of the Peace, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 Misc. 82, 220 N.Y.S. 696, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-clark-v-adel-nysupct-1927.