People, Ex Rel. Lent v. . Carr

3 N.E. 82, 100 N.Y. 236, 2 How. Pr. 501, 55 Sickels 236, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 973
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 N.E. 82 (People, Ex Rel. Lent v. . Carr) 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. Lent v. . Carr, 3 N.E. 82, 100 N.Y. 236, 2 How. Pr. 501, 55 Sickels 236, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 973 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

The question to be determined on this appeal is, whether the provision contained in section 13 of article 6 of the Constitution, to the effect that no person shall hold the office of judge or justice of any court longer than until and including the last day of December next after he shall be seventy years of age,” applies to persons holding the office of surrogate.

The important judicial functions exercised by surrogates may afford reason for applying to them a disqualification by age, similar to that prescribed with respect to judges and justices of courts referred to in the Constitution. But the question before us is not, whether the disqualification should have been extended to those officers, or whether it should be deemed by *239 analogy to apply to them, but whether by the terms of the Constitution they are included in it under the designation of persons holding the office of “judge or justice of any court.”

For the purpose of determining this question, it is necessary in the first place to consider the context in which the language quoted is used in section 13 of article 6, and also other provisions of article 6 of the Constitution, the whole of that article having been adopted by the vote of the people at the same time, in 1869, as a separate article known as the judiciary article. Section 2 of article 6 establishes a Court of Appeals, to be composed of a chief judge and six associate judges, to be elected, and to hold office for the term of fourteen years. Section 6 provides for the continuance of the existing Supreme Court, to be composed of the justices then in office, with an additional justice to be elected.

Section 12 provides that the Superior Court of the city of New York shall be composed of six judges, and the Court of Common Pleas of the same city, of the three judges then in office and three additional judges ; the Superior Court'of Buffalo, of the judges then in office and their successors, and the City Court of Brooklyn, of such number of judges, not exceeding three, as may be provided by law.

Section 13 provides for the election of justices of the Supreme Court and of judges of all the other courts mentioned in section 12, and declares that the official terms of the said justices and judges who shall be elected after the adoption of the article shall be fourteen years, and then follows immediately, in the same section, the provision, “ but no person shall hold the office of judge or justice of any court longer than until and including the last day of December next after he shall be seventy years of age.” Section 14 next follows, providing that a compensation shall be established by law for the services of the judges and justices hereinbefore mentioned, which shall not be diminished during their official terms.

It must be observed that up to this point no person has been designated in the Constitution ap a judge or justice of any count except the judges of the Court of Appeals, the justices *240 of the Supreme Court, and the judges of the Superior Court and Court of Common Pleas of the city of ITew York, of the Superior Court of the city of Buffalo and of the City- Court of Brooklyn.

That the limitation as to age was intended to apply to the judges and justices of those courts is too clear to be capable’of misapprehension. The only other officers or body having judicial powers, mentioned in the sections of article 6, preceding section 13, are the Commission of Appeals. That high tribunal had power, under section 4, .to hear and determine certain of the causes pending in the Court of Appeals, and by section 5, it was provided that the decisions of the Commission should be entered and enforced as the judgments of the Court of Appeals.. But the Commission was not designated in the Constitution as a court, nor the commissioners as judges, but as commissioners, and it was therefore assumed that the disqualification of age under section 13 did not apply to them, for it is a matter of history that one venerable commissioner held his office without question for several years after he had passed the age of seventy, and in the case of Settle v. Van Evrea (49 N. Y. 280), it was decided that section 27 of article 6, which prohibits any judge of the Court of Appeals from acting as referee, did not apply to a commissioner, because he was not a judge of the court.

All the provisions of article 6 of the Constitution bearing upon the question at issue, which precede sections 13 and 14, have now been examined, and we next come to section 15, relating to County Courts. This section continues the existing County Courts and provides that the judges thereof then an office shall hold their offices until the expiration of their respective terms, and that their successors shall be chosen by the electors of the counties for the term of six years. These judges come literally within the words of the Constitution, for they are judges of courts, designated as such by the Constitution. (People v. Gardner, 45 N. Y. 812; People, ex rel. Joyce, v. Brundage, 78 id. 403.) No judicial officer, other than those *241 who have been ah’eady named, is in any part of the Constitution designated as a judge or justice of any court.

Justices of the peace are mentioned in section 15, and they exercise judicial powers. Two justices of the peace, together with the county judge, compose Courts of Sessions with such criminal jurisdiction as the legislature shall prescribe, and such justices may also exercise jurisdiction to a limited extent in civil cases, and may hold courts for that purpose. At the same time they exercise other powers. They are in numerous sections of the Constitution designated, not as judges or justices of any court, but as justices of the peace, and are elected under that designation, and on these grounds it was decided in the late case of People v. Mann (97 N. Y. 532), that they did not come within the disqualification by age contained in section 13 of article 6.

Surrogates are throughout all the provisions of article 6 designated as officers by that name, and not as judges or justices of any court. . By section 15 of article 6, it is provided that the county judge shall also be surrogate of his county, but that in counties having a population exceeding forty thousand, the legislature may provide for the election of a separate officer to be surrogate, whose term of office shall be the same as that of the county judge, which is six years. By section 16 the legislature is empowered, on application of the board of supervisors, to provide for the election of local officers, not to exceed two in any county, to discharge the duties of county judge and of surrogate in cases of them inability or of a vacancy. In section 25 surrogates are coupled with justices of the peace and other local judicial officers. Section 27 refers to Surrogates’ Courts, and for their relief authorizes the legislature to confer upon courts of record in any county having a population exceeding four hundred thousand, the powers and jurisdiction of surrogates.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 N.E. 82, 100 N.Y. 236, 2 How. Pr. 501, 55 Sickels 236, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-lent-v-carr-ny-1885.