People ex rel. Williamson v. Allen

42 Barb. 203, 1864 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 79
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 42 Barb. 203 (People ex rel. Williamson v. Allen) 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. Williamson v. Allen, 42 Barb. 203, 1864 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 79 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court,

Leonard, J.

Proceedings were instituted in May last, before the Hon. Geo. G. Barnard, one of the justices of this court, by Messrs. Allen, Purser and Wood-ruff, claiming to have been appointed to the office of commissioners of taxes, &c. against the relators here, Messrs. Williamson and Brown, who were before that time the incumbents, for the purpose of obtaining possession of the books and papers of the office, which the relators refused to surrender to the persons who had been so appointed. These proceedings resulted in an order directing the relators to deliver the books and papers to the new appointees, the defendants, Allen and others, or that, in case of default, they be committed to prison. These proceedings have been brought before the general term by certiorari, for review.

The revised statutes declare that whenever any person shall be removed from office, or the term for which he shall have been elected or appointed shall expire, he shall, on demand, deliver over to his successor, all the books and papers in his custody, as such officer, or in any way appertaining to his office. If any person shall neglect or refuse to deliver over to his successor any books or papers, such successor may make complaint thereof to any justice of the supreme court, who shall grant an order directing the person so refusing to show cause before him, within some short and reasonable time, why he should not be compelled to deliver the same. At the time appointed, the justice shall proceed to enquire into the circumstances, and unless the person charged with witholding such books and papers, shall make affidavit that he has truly delivered them to his successor, and it shall appear that they have been withheld, the justice is required, by warrant, to commit the person so withholding to the jail of the county, until he shall deliver such books and papers, [205]*205or be discharged according to law; and the justice is authorized to issue a search warrant to find such books and papers, and bring them, before him. (1 R. S. 125, §§ 50, 51, 52, 53, 54.)

It has been well decided that this statute can be put in operation only in a case where the claimant has a clear prima facie title to the office, free from reasonable doubt. (The People v. Stevens, 5 Hill, 616, 631, and note, 631 In re Whiting, 2 Barb. S. C. R. 513. In re Baker, 11 How. Pr. R. 430.) These cases also hold, as well as numerous others, that in a case free from reasonable doubt in respect to the title to the office, it is the duty of the justice to proceed and protect the party elected or appointed to office, against the unlawful witholding, by his predecessors, of the books and papers of the office. (Cobee v. Davis, 8 How. Pr. R. 367.) In the cases cited, the books and papers were withheld under a claim of title to the office; and the judge before whom the proceedings were pending, found it necessary to look into the title, for the purpose of ascertaining whether the right of the applicant was free from reasonable doubt. Such an examination is not a trial of the title to the office, because that is not the question involved. The title remains wholly unaffected by the decision of the justice upon the question upon which the law requires him to pass, when a proper case is presented, by proceedings under this statute. If the justice could be excluded from taking cognizance of the right of an applicant for the possession of books and papers, in every case where a plausible argument could be raised, or where the right or title to the office might depend upon evidence to be adduced by the rival claimants, discarding, in the case of an elective office, the certificate of election, and permitting oral testimony of fraud or irregularity in conducting the election, to raise a doubt in his mind in favor of the party withholding the official books, there would be few cases where relief could be afforded ; and the statute would virtually become obsolete and of no effect.

[206]*206In the case of Balter, cited above from 11 How. Pr. R. 430. he claimed to withhold the books and papers of the office of supervisor, on the ground that'the officers conducting the election, at which the party who claimed to be his successor had been a candidate for that office as well as himself, had been guilty of misconduct, and that the election was irregular. The irregularities and misconduct complained of do not appear to have been disputed, and on a trial of the title of the parties to the office in question, might have resulted in favor of Baker, who had been the incumbent previous to the election. It was held by Judge Theron B. Strong that the certificate of the canvassers was prima facie evidence of title to the office, and conclusive until it was overcome by judgment, on a trial of tbe question of title, and Baker was held to be properly imprisoned in the county jail until he should surrender the books and papers of the office as he had been adjudged to do. The opinion of Justice Clerke, of this court, in the case of Bartlett, decided in 1854, and reported 9 How. Pr. R. p. 414, is directly in point. Judge Clerke says in that case that “the object is to compel the delivery of the books and papers by a summary proceeding, to which any person duly appointed to an office is absolutely entitled, without any qualification or reservation. The only questions to be ascertained by the judge, to whom the application is made, are, has the predecessor been legally removed, and has the claimant been legally appointed." (jp. 416.)

The opinions in the celebrated case of Conover and Develin nave been much relied on by the learned counsel for the relators in this case. The opinion-of Judge Peabody, in the Matter of Conover, (5 Abb. Pr. R. 74,) has been cited as a correct interpretation of the law, although conceded to have been badly applied. In that case the learned judge held that Conover having been in possession of the books and papers of the office of street commissioner, and having in one instance performed some duty pertaining to the office, he was [207]*207in office de facto, and that he would not look into the title of the respective claimants, de jure; that the abstract right of the applicant was unimportant where possession was clearly shown; that it should not be inquired into further than to see that, if in possession, he has color of title; that being in the office under color of right, he should have the proceedings to get the books and papers; and on the other hand, that having the best possible right to an office, one should not have possession of the boobs and papers by this proceeding, while it is apparent he is not in the occupancy of office, and not in a situation to exercise the functions of it. (Videp. 79.) This amounts to a denial of relief while another party is in possession, and holds under a claim, however unfounded, that he is ontitléd.

Upon this theory, the learned justice, in the case of Con-over, closed his eyes to the fact, which he did not assume to investigate, that Develin had the clear and undoubted right to the office and to the possession of the books and papers. There was no ground for a reasonable doubt in the case as to the right of Develin, and in refusing to look into the question of title, for the purpose of ascertaining whether it was clear, and free from reasonable doubt, the authority of preceding decisions was denied.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Barb. 203, 1864 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-williamson-v-allen-nysupct-1864.