People Ex Rel. Lefever v. Board of Supervisors

34 N.Y. 268
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 34 N.Y. 268 (People Ex Rel. Lefever v. Board of Supervisors) 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. Lefever v. Board of Supervisors, 34 N.Y. 268 (N.Y. 1866).

Opinion

Leonard, J.

The answer to the alternative mandamus, as a pleading, is informally and inartificially drawn. The issues joined upon the matters alleged in the writ, are mixed up with the allegation of new matter throughout. The allegation of new matter, constituting a defense, should he separately stated. Much of the new matter in this answer consists of allegations impeaching the record of the assessment of the relator’s damage for irregularities in drawing and challenging the jurors. These are collateral issues, not triable in this action, but reviewable, if at all, on a direct issue between the parties to the record, the relator and the commissioners of highways. Another issue sought to be raised by the answer is that Philip Hasbrouek was the person who officiated as a justice of the peace in summoning the jury, &c., but that he was not a justice in fact. None of these facts are separately pleaded so that the relator can properly take issue or demur. The last mentioned allegation is probably demurrable, as amounting only to the general issue, because on a denial of the statement in the alternative writ, that the list of jurors, drawn by the clerk, &c., was delivered to a justice of the peace of the town of New Paltz, or that such justice issued a summons, swore the jurors and witnesses, and certified the verdict, the relator would have been required to prove the very facts so alleged as new matter. The particular part of the answer, which the relator *269 has regarded as a separate defense, and to which he has served the pleading giving rise to the demurrer, is framed in the following manner, viz.:

And these defendants further answering, state and return, that they deny that the - verdict of the jurors was certified to by said Philip S. Hasbrouck, who claimed to act as justice of the peace as aforesaid.”

This purports to be a denial of a statement in a former pleading of the other party. But there is no allegation in the alternative writ that Hasbrouck certified the verdict, nor that he was the justice, nor is he mentioned, even. The paragraph does not purport to be an allegation. It is. an impertinent and frivolous paragraph, without meaning, according to the principles of pleading. It is not a denial of anything alleged by the opposite pleader, nor is it an allegation of new matter which the other party can be called on to admit or deny. It might be shown, by argument, that the pleader intended to deny that the justice who is stated in the writ to have acted in the proceeding by issuing the summons for the jurors, &c., was the justice who certified the verdict.

It is not the duty of a court to resort to an inference or an argument as to the meaning of a bad pleading in order to sustain it on demurrer. Parties are required to make clear and distinct statements in their pleadings. Every intendment, on a demurrer, is against the pleader. Courts are not to labor to make a better statement for the pleader, on a technical issue of this kind, than he has made for himself.

Had the paragraph quoted from the answer remained without any reply on the part of the relator, it could not have injured him at the trial, because it denies nothing alleged in the former pleading, and asserts nothing affirmatively. It called for no reply for that reason, and it was a mistake on the part of the relator to plead to it. The issue purporting to be raised by the reply and the demurrer, has no legitimate relation to the previous pleading. The issue so joined should .have been stricken out by the Supreme *270 Court as frivolous or immaterial. (Heaton v. Bartlett, 13 Wend., 672.)

The issue calls for no judgment or decision. The General Term has, however, rendered a judgment against the relator on this issue, that he take nothing by his bill, and that the respondents recover costs. It is wholly immaterial, and must for that reason be reversed.

The case on the merits is also clearly with the relator, and I will proceed to examine the question raised, upon the assumption that it is before us on legitimate and material allegations in the pleadings.

. The reply admits that the verdict was not certified by the justice who issued the summons, and states, in avoidance, as new matter, that the commissioners of highways procured the justice to refuse to certify the verdict for the purpose of interrupting the proceedings and preventing the reassessment of damages; and that the justice, against the will of the relator, absented himself, and could not be found or induced to certify the verdict. That another justice of the same town, who attended the proceedings, certified the verdict.

To this pleading the respondent has demurred.

The question so presented is, whether the verdict can be certified by any justice other than the one who issued the summons; or, in other words, whether the certificate of the justice who issued the .summons can be dispensed with.

The statute provides that twelve jurors shall be drawn by the clerk of an adjoining town, who shall make a certificate of their names and the purpose for which they were drawn, and deliver it to the party first asking for the reassessment. The party shall, within twenty-four hours, deliver the certificate to a justice of the peace of the town wherein the damages are to be assessed; it is made the duty of such justice forthwith to issue a summons to a constable of the tpwn, directing him to summon the persons named as jurors, specifying the time and place where they are to meet. When they appear, the justice who issued the summons shall draw '¡by lot six of the persons attending as a jury, and. the first *271 six persons drawn, who shall be free from exceptions, shall be the jury to reassess the damages; the said jury shall be sworn by the said justice, well and truly to determine and reassess the damages, and shall take a view of the premises, hear the parties and such witnesses as may be offered and sworn by the said justice before them, and shall render their verdict in writing under their hands, which shall be certified by said justice, and be delivered to the commissioners of highways of the town, and the same shall be final, (2 R. S., 5th ed., 397, 398, §§ 85 to 93; Sess. L., 1847, ch. 455.)

There is no ambiguity in the direction of the statute. It is the same justice who issued the summons who is required to certify the verdict.

The demurrer admits the truth of the new matter pleaded; and if is apparent that the misconduct of the justice in a minor particular, now admitted by the demurrer, is put forward as the means of defeating the primary or principal object of the legislature in enacting the statute. The object of the statute is to afford a remedy to the owner, through whose land the commissioners of highways seek to open a new road, against an undervaluation of his land by the commissioners appointed by the county court. Id., 397, § 83, or vice versa.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.Y. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-lefever-v-board-of-supervisors-ny-1866.