People ex rel. Staats v. Tremain

17 How. Pr. 10
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 How. Pr. 10 (People ex rel. Staats v. Tremain) 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. Staats v. Tremain, 17 How. Pr. 10 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1858).

Opinion

S. B. Strong, Justice.

Several suits were instituted against the relators by the district attorney of the county of Kings, in the name of the people, under the twenty-first section of the act to establish a Metropolitan police district, com[11]*11prising the counties of New-York, Kings, Westchester and Richmond, passed on the 15th of April, 1857, to recover penalties of fifty dollars in each case, for publicly keeping and disposing of intoxicating liquor on Sunday. That act expressly authorizes the district attorney to bring such suits in the name of the people, for the benefit of “ the police contingent fund,” thereby authorized. The actions were commenced in this court; they were tfied at a circuit court, and verdicts therein were rendered for the defendants, upon which judgments for their costs were entered up against the people. The Revised Statutes as originally enacted, provide, (2 R. S. 553, § 14,) that “ whenever costs shall be adjudged against the people in any civil suit or proceeding, instituted by any officer duly authorized for that purpose, it shall be the duty of the comptroller to draw on the treasurer for the amount thereof, upon the production of an authenticated copy of the record of judgment with a taxed bill thereof; and upon a certificate of the attorney-general that such suit was duly instituted as by law required.” The relators applied to the attorney-general to grant the certificate mentioned in the section of the Revised Statutes which I have quoted. That officer denied their application, and they now ask this court to issue mandamus directing him to give the requisite certificate to enable them to obtain the money from the state treasury. There was no dispute on the argument, but that the papers presented to the attorney-general, sufficiently indicated that the suits had been duly instituted as required by law. Indeed, there could not well be any doubt upon that point. The district attorney was clearly authorized by'the police act, to commence the suits, and the Revised Statutes indicate that suits properly instituted may fail, and the people of the state be liable for the costs. The attorney-general places his refusal to grant the certificate mainly upon the following grounds : First, that such costs are not a legitimate charge upon the state treasury. Second, that if they had been, the laws do not make it imperative upon him to grant the required certificate; and third, that there has not been any appropriation by the legislature to pay them.

[12]*12■ The Revised Statutes of 1830, provided, (2 R. S. 619, § 38,) that in all civil suits by or in the name of the people, instituted by any officer duly authorized for that purpose, and not brought on the relation of any citizen, the people shall be liable for the costs in the same cases and to the same extent as if such suit or proceeding was instituted by an individual.” It was subsequently enacted, however, (Laws of 1832, ch. 246, § 37,) that in all suits thereafter to be commenced in the name of the people of this state, when the debt, damages or sum of money in controversy, if recovered, will not belong to the treasury of this state, the cost of prosecuting such suit or defending, when the defendant succeeds in his defence, shall not be a charge against the state treasury; but such costs, if the suit shall be brought for a debt, damages or sum of money, or when the matter in controversy if recovered, will belong to any particular county, city, town or village, shall be a charge against such county, city, town or village.” If the people had succeeded in the suits against the relators, the money would not have belonged to the treasury of this state, and if the section which I have last quoted had been still the law, the defendant’s costs would not have been a charge upon the state treasury.

The Code (§ 303) abolishes the pre-existing fee bill, but it does not in all cases repeal the former statutory provisions relative to the liability for costs. It repeals many of them directly, and others by implication, but in all other instances they still prevail. There is no direct repeal of the provisions of former statutes imposing and regulating the liability of the people of the state for the payment of costs in unsuccessful suits instituted in their name. It is provided, however, (Code, §319,) that “in all civil actions prosecuted in the name of the people of this state, by an officer duly authorized for that purpose, the people shall be liable for costs in the same cases and to the same extent as private parties. .If a private person be joined with the people as plaintiff, he shall be liable in the first instance for the defendant’s costs, which shall not be recovered of the people till after execution issued therefor against such [13]*13private party, and returned unsatisfied.” It is provided however, in the next (320th) section, that in an action prosecuted in the name of the people of this state, for the recovery of money or property, or to establish a right or claim, for the benefit of any county, city, town, village, corporation or person, costs awarded against the plaintiff shall be a charge against the party for whose benefit the action was prosecuted, and not against the people. It is apparent from these provisions of the Code, that it was designed that defendants in suits instituted in the name of the people by a competent- officer, in the cases authorized by law, should recover their costs from some source. The first part of the 319th section refers to and embraces all such cases. The only qualification or exceptions to the liar bility of the people of the state, are contained in the subsequent part of the same section and in the 320th section. This in effect repeals the provision which I have quoted from the act of 1832, exempting the state from liability, when the sums if recovered, would not have belonged to the state treasury; excepting from the repeal, however, the cases where the suits were instituted for the benefit of any county, city, town, village, corporation or person. The legislature by re-enacting one part of the section, and omitting the other, clearly evinced a determination to repeal the part omitted. And such was the legitimate effect. It is clear that the suits against the relators were not prosecuted for the benefit of any county, city, town, village or person. They were instituted for the benefit of the police district, which comprehended all of those bodies and such persons, but was not identical with or comprised within the definition of either. It has been decided by our court of appeals, that a constitutional provision relative to the election of the officers of counties and towns, was not applicable to such district, and the same construction must be given to similar phraseology in an act of the legislature. Neither is the district a corporation within the meaning of the 320th section of the Code. It is a political institution, possessed indeed of some corporate powers, but not sufficient to entitle it to the designation of a corporation. That the section alluded to was [14]*14not intended to include the political divisions of the territory of the state in that term, is apparent from its particular specification of counties, cities, towns and villages, which would have been superfluous if such bodies had been included in the general term.

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Bluebook (online)
17 How. Pr. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-staats-v-tremain-nysupct-1858.