People Ex Rel. Taylor v. . Dunlap

66 N.Y. 162, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 207
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 N.Y. 162 (People Ex Rel. Taylor v. . Dunlap) 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. Taylor v. . Dunlap, 66 N.Y. 162, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 207 (N.Y. 1876).

Opinion

AlNdrews, J.

The office of commissioner of jurors, the title to which is in controversy in this action, was created by chapter 495 of the Laws of 1847, entitled “An act in relation to jurors in the city of Hew York.”

The general purpose of the act, as its provisions indicate, was to provide a system for ascertaining the persons liable to perform jury duty in the city of Hew York, and for distributing the jury service, and enforcing its performance in aid of the administration of justice by the courts of general and local jurisdiction therein.

Prior to the act of 1847, the mode of selecting jurors in the city of Hew York was regulated by the Revised Statutes. Each ward was deemed a town for the purpose of returning jurors, and the statute imposed upon the common council the *164 duty to “provide by ordinance the manner in which, and how often, the selection [of jurors] should be made, and the officers and persons by whom it shall be conducted.” (2 B. S., 413, § 31.) The common council, in pursuance of the authority and duty thus given and imposed, appointed and designated the assessors of the several wards to prepare the lists of jurors, and when prepared they were returned to the county clerk, and the subsequent proceedings were had in accordance with the general law of the State upon the subject. (Corporation Ordinances [edition 1845], § 22.) The provisions of the Bevised Statutes for the selection and return of jurors for the city of New York were not new in imposing upon the common council the duty of providing for the return of the jury lists. The same provisions, in substance, were contained in the Bevised Laws of 1813, as modified by the act of 1825. (1 Bevised Laws, 329, § 13; Laws of 1825, ’ 131, §1.)

. The act "of 1847 made a radical change in the mode of selecting jurors for the city of New York. By the second section it was provided that there should be a commissioner of jurors to be appointed by the supervisors of the city, the judges of the Superior Court, and the judges of the Court of Common Pleas. The «act made it the duty of the commissioner of jurors to prepare jury lists, containing the names of persons subject to jury duty in the city; to hear and determine claims for exemption, and when the jury lists were completed, to return them to the county clerk, and certain powers were vested in him in respect to the imposition and remission of fines upon defaulting jurors, which had theretofore been exer-' cised by the courts. The fines collected were to be paid into the county treasury, and the supervisors were directed (§ 11) to allow the commissioner out of the fines, etc., a reasonable compensation, and to provide him (§ 12) with books, stationery" q,nd a suitable room for an office. He was required (§ 2) to execute to the mayor, aldermen and commonalty, an official bpnd in the penalty of $5,000, to be approved by the mayor.

It will be seen from this reference to the provisions *165 of the act, that the commissioner of jurors, succeeded to the power theretofore vested in ward assessors under the ordinance of the common council in respect to the preparation ol jury lists, but the act had a broader scope, and aimed, by concentrating powers and duties which had before been distributed between the local officers and the courts, in a single person, to establish a more complete and efficient administrative system for the regulation of the jury service in the city. Another act upon the same subject is chapter 539 of the Laws of 1870. It contains many additional provisions in furtherance of the general purpose of the act of 1817. It provides for a fixed salary to the commissioner of jurors, and directs that it shall be paid by the comptroller of the city (§ 17) and the commissioners of taxes, the commissioners of police, and all other officers of the city are directed (§ 13) to render all the assistance in their power to enable the commissioner of jurors to procure the names of persons liable to jury duty.

The relator, in May, 1861, was appointed commissioner of jurors by a convention composed of the judges of the Superior Court and Court of Common Pleas, and the supervisors of the city, and entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office, and continued to act as commissioner until July 22, 1875, when the defendant, upon the nomination of the mayor, and the confirmation of the board of aider-men, acting under the authority of an act entitled “An act to reorganize the local government of the city of Hew York,” being chapter 335 of the Laws of 1873, was appointed commissioner of jurors. By the twenty-fifth section of that act it is provided that “ the mayor shall nominate and, by and with the consent of the board of aldermen, appoint the heads of departments and all commissioners, * * * and also members of any local board, and all other officers not elected by the people, including the commissioner of jurors.”

The defendant assumed to act as commissioner of jurors under his appointment, and has ever since remained in possession of the office. Ho question is raised as to the regularity of his appointment under the act of 1873; and his title *166 to the office is challenged on the single ground that the provisions of the act vesting the power of appointment of commissioner of jurors in the mayor and aldermen is in conflict with section 16 of article 3 of the Constitution, in that the subject of the appointment of a commissioner of jurors is not a subject expressed in the title. The more specific ground upon which the objection is based is, that the commissioner of jurors created by the act of 1847 was a county officer, and that a change in the mode of appointment could not constitutionally be made by an act which, by its title, relates to a reorganization of the city government of the city of ¡New York. The body of the act of 1873 deals with the corporate powers of the city, and, in substance, is a revision . of the city charter, and the title indicates that this was the subject of the enactment. If the legislature, in enacting a city charter, should undertake therein to prescribe the mode of appointment of an officer whose character as a county officer was indelibly fixed by constitutional provision, there would be much reason for claiming that the act, in this respect, would violate the constitutional provision referred to. The subject of the appointment of a county officer would not be understood as being comprehended within the title of an act which related to the powers and functions of a city government. It would be another and distinct subject, and one not expressed in the title.

The act of 1847 creating the office of commissioner of jurors did not, in terms, make it a county office; and neither the mode of appointment or the functions which the officer was to exercise made him distinctively a county officer. The power of appointment was vested in the persons who at the time were supervisors of the city, acting in conjunction with the judges of two of the local courts; but the supervisors, in exercising the power conferred, did not act as a board in their corporate capacity, but as individual officers clothed by the legislature, in connection with the judges, with a specific authority. It may he observed, also, that the supervisors were at the same time the aldermen of the city. Nor did the *167

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.Y. 162, 1876 N.Y. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-taylor-v-dunlap-ny-1876.