People Ex Rel. Kenyon v. . Sutherland

81 N.Y. 1, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 184
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 1 (People Ex Rel. Kenyon v. . Sutherland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Kenyon v. . Sutherland, 81 N.Y. 1, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 184 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Folger, J.

There is no objection made to the form of the order discharging the insolvent from his debts. It will be effectual in its terms for that purpose, if the officer signing it has duly observed all the prerequisites of the statutes.

There are several particulars in which it is claimed that he has not.

First. It is contended that he did not have proof that notice of the order to show cause (2 B. S., p. 18, § 8) had been duly served upon the creditors. (Oh. 366, Laws of 1847, p. 470, §§ 1, 2.) By the last cited act he is prohibited from proceeding in the matter, when the place of residence of creditors is known to the insolvent, until proof shall have been given to his satisfaction of the service of the notice in the manner prescribed by the act. The petition of the insolvent averred knowledge of the general place of residence of all the creditors but one. The city judge should not have moved without proof of service of that notice. It would have been irregular to have done so, and would have vitiated all things thereafter done, unless the irregularity had been cured.

It is well to say, in view of a part of the argument for the appellant, that the satisfaction of the officer spoken of in the act is a legal satisfaction. He is to be convinced. His conviction is not to be arbitrary or capricious. It is to be brought about by means that are fit and enough to produce conviction in the mind acting judicially. He may no more be satisfied by that which the law will deem inadequate to produce conviction, than he may withhold his satisfaction when that proof is produced to him that the law will say he ought in reason to be satisfied with. (Folliard v. Wallace, 2 Johns. 395.) He is to be convinced by proof. Proof is the effect of evidence. The evidence might be oral, but then, prudentially, it should be reduced to writing, so that it could be kept. In the case in hand it was in writing. It was needful that it should be in such form and shape, and with such accompaniments, as to *6 show to the officer that some person’s conscience had. been hound by an oath or affirmation, and that what the written paper offered to him as averments of facts had been asserted therein and thereby under • the sanction and obligation of an oath. It should appear to him by the paper presented to him that some person, by reason of that paper, had incurred the pains and penalties for perjury if the statements in it were willfully false; and the paper itself should show to him who was that person. The writing in this case was meant to be in the form of an affidavit; it was meant to be an affidavit, a judicial and not a voluntary one. An affidavit has been defined to be an oath in writing, signed by the party deposing and sworn to before an officer authorized to put an oath. (Bac. Abr., title Affidavit.) But the Supreme .Court of this State has held that the writing is an affidavit in law, though not signed by the deponent, if his name appear in the body of it, and it he duly sworn to. (Haff v. Spicer, 3 Cai. 190; Jackson v. Virgil, 3 Johns. 540; Millius v. Shafer, 3 Den. 60.) Chancellor Walworth differed with the Supreme Court, and afterward held that an affidavit must be subscribed at the foot of it, giving as his reason that without it it would be difficult, if not impossible, to sustain 'a prosecution for perjury, especially where no persons other than the deponent and the officer were present when the former was sworn. (Hathaway v. Scott, 11 Pai. 173.) The reason given by the chancellor for his ruling is doubtless that which has governed in any requirements made for the forms and contents of an affidavit. The decisions have been exacting, that the title of the cause in which it purported to have been taken should be precisely and minutely set forth. (Fores v. Diemar, 7 T. R. 661; Rex v. Sheriff of Surry, 2 East, 181.) This vyas doubtless to establish that the oath was taken in a matter pending judicially; that it was not a voluntary affidavit. By rules of court the insertion of the true place of the deponent’s habitation, and his true addition, has been required. (1 Lill. Abr. 53 F.; Reg. v. Harrison, 1 Jebb & Symes, 422; Jarrett v. Dillon, 1 East, 18.) And the statement in the jurat of the names of those sworn *7 when several persons joined in an affidavit. (1 Ell. & Bl. Appendix, xxiv.) This was doubtless for the sure identification of the person who took the oath; and all of these requirements were to prevent escape from the penalty of perjury, if it had been committed. Now there was produced in this case to the officer a paper, which indicated the judicial proceeding in which it purported to have been made; with a proper venue; subscribed with what purported to be the name of a certain person ; and having a jurat signed by an officer having due authority to put an oath, which jurat declared that the paper was subscribed and sworn to before him on a day given. There was no name of a deponent in the body of the affidavit. The case is the converse of those cited above from the Supreme Court decisions. The Supreme Court in the cases supra gave no reasons for its ruling. It is probable that the reason was, that the naming of the deponent in the body of the affidavit was thought as practically effectual to identify him as his signature at the foot of the paper. If that be the reason, then the need of signature, or naming in the body, is but for identification ; and as signature is as effectual or more so than thus to name, it is a legitimate deduction from these cases that signature to an affidavit, though there be no naming of deponent in the body^of it, will save it from condemnation.

It is claimed that, by reason of this omission, the paper is not an affidavit and was not evidence to the officer of the matter declared in it to be fact. It does, however, come within the definition from Bacon’s Abridgement (supra). No decision has been cited to us, nor have we been able, with some pain in search, to find one, that holds that such a paper is not to be taken in evidence, in cases where the written statement of a witness may be used instead of his presence and oral examination. It has been held, when the affidavit, to be effectual, must be made by one having a certain character or personal capacity, wherein he acted or is to act in doing the matters averred therein, that the paper ought to state that the deponent has that character or capacity. (Ex parte Bank of Monroe, 7 Hill, 177; Ex parte Shumway, 4 Den. 258; Staples v. Fairchild, *8 3 N. Y. 41.) In such case it is manifest that the name of the deponent must he stated, to apply to him by that name the statement of his capacity. These cases do not come up to holding that to make an affidavit in general effectual, the name of the deponent must appear in the body of the paper. We are obliged to pass upon the question as reason bids us. We have stated above what should be required in such a paper.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 1, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-kenyon-v-sutherland-ny-1880.