People ex rel. Fleming v. Hart

13 N.Y.S. 903, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 874, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1734
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 6, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 13 N.Y.S. 903 (People ex rel. Fleming v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Fleming v. Hart, 13 N.Y.S. 903, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 874, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1734 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Daly, C. J

This is an appeal by the defendant, A. Bloomer Hart, rector of the Protestant Episcopal Church of St. Stephen in the city of New York, from an order of the special term of this court, made upon the petition of Charles E. Fleming, church-warden, and William F. Watson and Charles Shroeder, vestry-men, corporators and trustees of said church, directing that a writ of mandamus issue to the said rector, requiring him to join with the said relators in holding a special election to supply vacancies in the vestry of said church, caused by the ousting from office of Stephen R. Weeks as churchwarden, and Thomas F. Cock, Edwin IC. Linen, S. Montgomery Pike, Edmund Luis Mooney, Henry W. Mooney, and William G. Smith, as vestrymen of said church, by a judgment of this court in an action in the nature of

[905]*905quo warranta, brought on behalf of the people of the state by the attorney general. 11 É. Y. Supp. 673. The order for the mandamus appointed a time and place for the holding of such election, and directed that it should be held under the supervision of a referee named by the court. From the whole of the order and the writ of mandamus issued in conformity therewith the defendant, as rector of said church, appeals. It appears that a regulár election for ehui ch-wardens and vestry-men was held in the said church at Easter, 1890, and the defendant, who presided as rector, announced and certified in the usual course that the last-named persons, together with these relators, were duly elected,—Weeks and Fleming, church-wardens; and Cock, Linen, Pike, E. L. Mooney, H. W, Mooney, Smith, Watson, and Shroeder, vestry-men. There had been much dissension in the corporation before this election was held, growing out of the action'of the former vestry at a special meeting in February, 1890, in voting to consolidate the church with the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Holy Trinity in the same city; and the rector had refused to give notice of an Easter election in 1890 in view of said vote and the agreement of consolidation entered into in pursuance thereof; but a mandamus to him having been issued by the supreme court (11 N. Y. Supp. 670) requiring a notice of the election to be given and the election to be held, he obeyed the writ, and held the election, at which he presided, and the result of which he declared as above mentioned. Subsequently the action of the attorney referred to was instituted, which resulted in ousting Weeks as churchwarden, and all the vestry-men except Watson and Shroeder. Among the officers so ousted were five members of the former vestry, who were in office as vestry-men at the time of the said election, viz., Weeks, Cock, Linen, Pike, and E. L. Mooney, and they, deeming that the judgment which ousted them established the invalidity of that election, and there were no successors to the former vestry chosen thereat, claimed to hold over under the statute; and upon their relation the attorney general commenced an action in the supreme court against these relators as defendants, together with the remaining members of the former vestry not joined as relators. The complaint in that action set forth the election of church-wardens and vestry-men at the annual election of 1889, and claimed that no person had at any time since been chosen or elected in their stead, and that these relators, Fleming, Watson, and Shroeder, wrongfully claimed and asserted that they had been elected at the election of 1890, and were usurping the offices of church-warden and vestry-men, and demanded judgment ousting them from such office, and adjudging the former vestry entitled to the offices by virtue of the election of May, 1889. That action was tried, and resulted in a judgment in favor of these relators, Fleming, Watson,' and Shroeder, dismissing the complaint upon the merits. Such judgment was rendered after the making of the order now appealed from, but the action was commenced while the application of these relators for this mandamus was pending.

The judgments established, as between the relators here who were elected in 1890, and all other persons claiming to have been elected with them at such election, or claiming to hold over for'want of a valid election in 1890: (1) That these relators are lawfully in office pursuant to said election, and lawfully exercising the powers of trustees of said church; (2) that the other persons claiming to have been elected at the time have no title to office as church-warden or vestry-men; (3) that the former vestry, elected in 1889, does not hold over, and that these relators were chosen in their stead. The judgments are not, in one sense, conclusive upon the defendant here, the rector of the church, because he was not a party to the actions in which they were rendered, and could not properly be made a party thereto, such actions being brought to try the title of the claimants who were made defendants therein; but, inasmuch as the only way in which the title of rival claimants to said offices could be determined was in such action, the judgment therein is con-[906]*906elusive upon all other persons who do hot claim the same office, but who might urge a doubt or question as to the title of such claimants where such doubt or question would affect the relief demanded against them in any collateral proceedings to which they and such claimants were parties. Such doubt or question is raised in this proceeding for a mandamus against the rector on the relation of these trustees for the holding of the special election. He objects that there is doubt of their title, and claims that to be a sufficient defense to the application for a mandamus. People v. Stevens, 5 Hill, 616. But, if the title of the relators has been established in a direct proceeding to test it, brought by rival claimants, or against them, the objection is answered, and the judgment in such proceeding is conclusive until reversed. .Thisis the present case, and the adjudications which the relators invoke must not only dispose of the defense that there are rival claimants to the office, but necessarily answer all objections assailing the title of the relators to the office of trustees of the church, and that any other person or persons whomsoever have any right to such offices, or to exercise the powers of church-warden and vestry-men, as holding over or otherwise; and, finally, must dispose of the objection that no vacancy now exists to be filled by a special election; for the contention of the defendant is that there is no vacancy; that there was a failure to elect-any trustees at the election of 1890, or a failure to choose a sufficient number to transact business, which, it is claimed, amounts to the same thing as a failure to elect any, (In re Union Ins. Co., 22 Wend. 591;) and that, therefore, the former vestry holds over, and all the offices are filled, (Laws 1813, c. 60, § 1; Laws 1844, c. ,158.) The contention being that there is no vacancy be-' cause the old, board holds over, a judgment against the members of the old board that they do not hold over establishes that a vacancy exists; and the number of vacancies is fixed by the one judgment which ousts seven of the trustees, and by the other judgment confirming the right of the three remaining trustees to hold the office. But if there were no such conclusive adjudications as- to title between the rival claimants to the office it would seem clear that a vacancy was created when the seven persops elected-in 1890 were subsequently ousted from office. There was an election regularly held at the church -at Easter, 1890, and two church-wardens and eight vestry-men were duly declared and certified elected. There was, therefore, a de facto

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 N.Y.S. 903, 36 N.Y. St. Rep. 874, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-fleming-v-hart-nyctcompl-1891.