People ex rel. White v. Justices & Clerk of New York Marine Court

3 Abb. Pr. 5
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Abb. Pr. 5 (People ex rel. White v. Justices & Clerk of New York Marine Court) 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. White v. Justices & Clerk of New York Marine Court, 3 Abb. Pr. 5 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

Peabody, J.

In this case a judgment was entered in the Marine Court by order of a single justice, in favor of the plaintiff. From that judgment an appeal was taken directly to the Common Pleas at general term.

The plaintiff, denying the jurisdiction of the Common Pleas to entertain an appeal, refused to appear in that court.

After the appeal to the Common Pleas was made, the plaintiff in the Marine Court applied to the justices and clerk of that court for an execution on his judgment in that court, on the ground that the appeal, being unauthorized by law, was of no effect, and the judgment of the Marine Court was still in force.

The Marine Court refused to issue the execution, and the plaintiff now applies to this court for a mandamus directing them to issue it.

The claim on the part of the plaintiff is:

1. That no appeal lies from the Marine Court to the Common Pleas • and

[6]*62. That if an appeal does lie at all, it lies only from the general term, composed of the three justices, on a judgment entered by order of the court thus organized.

Either of these propositions being decided in favor of the plaintiff, he -is entitled to the relief he asks. The last proposition is urged on the ground that the court below having a branch to which appeals from the judgment of a single justice may be taken for review, the defendant is bound on general principles to carry his case to that branch, before applying to-a court of superior jurisdiction.

In The People on rel. Figaniere a. The Justices of the Marine Court, (2 Abbott, 126,) the general term of this court, on a motion for a mandamus to compel the general term of the Marine Court to vacate its judgment, on the ground that no appeal lay from the decision of a single justice of that court to its general term, denied the motion, and decided that such an appeal did' lie. That case decides that an appeal from a judgment, by order of a single justice, does lie to the general term of that court in a case like that, and if it lies in one case, it almost necessarily lies in all. The court, in the opinion given, say : “We think that an appeal lies to the general term from any and all judgments entered in that court by a single judge, and that, whether the cause was tried with or without a jury. This, power is given by the laws of 1853, section 5, chapter 617.”

It only remains for us to inquire whether an appeal lies also-to the Common Pleas directly from the same class of judgments. If it does, the party appealing is at liberty to appeal either to the general term of the Marine Court, or to the-general term of the Common Pleas, or perhaps to both, at' his pleasure. This condition of the law is not to be presumed, and only to be admitted, if expressly ordained by the-statute.

Prior to the statute of 1853, appeal from this class of judgments did lie to the general term of the Common Pleas directly, but the Marine Court, prior to that statute, had no general: term, and no power to review its judgments. That statute created the general term, and conferred on it powers of review in cases like the present. It did this without expressly repealing the statute under which the Common Pleas had previously [7]*7entertained these appeals, or altering by express terms the powers of the Common Pleas in that respect; for no reference is made in the act to that court or to the course of practice then existing. The appellate powers of the Court of Common Pleas were then general, and applicable to all cases of judgment in the Marine Court. The first judgment in a cause in that court then, was the only one it could render, and from this judgment the appeal to the Common Pleas was necessarily made directly; but that statute gave the Marine Court powers of review, and the question is, what eifect had this endowment of the Marine Court on the powers of the Common Pleas, or had it any ? May that court still entertain appeals directly from a judgment of a single justice of the Marine Court, as it did when the latter court had no power to review it, and such a judgment was the last and only one the court could render ? Or must an appeal from such a judgment now be taken first to the general term of that court, and the jurisdiction of the court in which the case originated be exhausted before the aid of the .appellate court can be availed of ?

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Abb. Pr. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-white-v-justices-clerk-of-new-york-marine-court-nysupct-1856.