People of the State of N.Y. v. . Ingersoll

58 N.Y. 1, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 469
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 58 N.Y. 1 (People of the State of N.Y. v. . Ingersoll) 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 of the State of N.Y. v. . Ingersoll, 58 N.Y. 1, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 469 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinions

Allen, J.

The'historv of this action, a fragment only of which is presented by the record before us, has been peculiar, and if the practice adopted is to ripen into a precedent may be regarded as unfortunate. Ordinarily, a judgment deliberately given upon a question directly in issue has been;, and should be, regarded as the law of the particular case by other judges in subsequent stages of the litigation, until reversed upon appeal. In no other way can justice be duly administered, or the decisions of the courts command the respect of suitors and the public. Conflicting decisions by different judges, resulting in final judgments in the same action, each carried out to its legitimate results, necessarily leads to confusion; and indulged in to any great extent, will bring reproach upon the judicial system.

The principal question, and indeed the only question of importance that has, as yet, been presented to the courts, is as to the status of the plaintiffs and their right to maintain the action. That was first presented by the demurrer of the defendant first served with process, and the decision was for the plaintiffs," overruling the demurrer at Special Term, this was affirmed at General Term, the three justices sustaining their respective views in well considered and elaborate written opinions. This result was acquiesced in by that defendant who answered over, and the action stands for trial upon the issues of fact joined therein. Thereafter, upon the motion of the present defendant, about one-third of the complaint was, by order of another judge, stricken out as irrelevant *11 and redundant,” the allegations being claimed by the defendant, and held by the court, not essential either to the right of the plaintiffs, or the liability of the defendants, in respect to the cause of action stated. To the complaint, thus expurgated and pruned of what was regarded by the court below as superfluous and redundant statements, the present defendant demurred, and had judgment both at Special and General Terms, upon the ground that the plaintiffs had no standing in court, or right to maintain the action in respect to the matters and causes alleged. Thus two conflicting decisions have been given and are now operative, under one of which the plaintiffs, having a judgment affirming their right to maintain the action, the parties have put themselves upon the country; from the other, the present appeal has been taken. The precise question presented by this appeal may — if the matter stricken out by the court upon the application of the present defendant was, in fact, “irrelevant and redundant,” in noway affecting the cause of action or the status of the plaintiffs, in case of a recovery by the plaintiffs — be presented upon an appeal from the judgment upon the issues of fact now ready for trial; and thus, if the practice iá tolerated, several successive appeals from judgments and decisions, in different forms, may be brought in the same action by different- parties, each presenting but the one and the same question. It is true, that the complaint has only been expurgated of the supposed redundant matter as to the present respondent, and as to the other defendants it stands as originally served; and the cause must proceed against them upon the facts alleged, so far as material to the right of the plaintiffs to sue, and upon the theory upon which the action was brought and the complaint framed by the learned counsel -for the plaintiffs, and this constitutes another of the anomalies of this case. Whether . the allegations and statements stricken out, as to this respondent, were or were not material, and might or might not be available to give the plaintiffs a right of action, is not before us upon this appeal; and no opinion is, therefore, expressed upon the question. It may be that if these allegations should *12 be sustained by proof, the case would be regarded as so essentially different from that presented by the demurrer before us, that the judgment in the one case would not control in the other. All possibility of conflict or successive appeals on the same question would have been obviated had the part stricken out been regarded by the court as redundant, as it had been adjudged, and the decision of the court first made adopted as the law of the case, irrespective of the individual opinions of the judges. In its present form, a very doubtful question is involved as to the right of the plaintiffs to appeal, there being m> final judgment as to all the parties defendant. But in view of the magnitude of the amount, and the novelty and importance of the questions involved, and the serious embarrassments and possible loss that might arise from a dismissal of the appeal, I incline to forego the consideration of the question of practice, and consider the appeal upon its merits, as if no question existed as to its regularity. The action having been severed, as to this defendant, in the manner and -by the proceedings before referred to, the demurrer of the defendant and the present appeal must be considered as if the present respondent were the sole defendant, and the action stood against him alone.

The appeal in the action, as it comes before us, does not involve the right of the State to maintain an action against the auditors or any of them for malfeasance in office, or any person occupying an official position and who has been faithless to his trust. The action is for the recovery of a certain sum alleged to have been obtained by the respondent and the other persons named in the complaint, his associates and confederates, by false and fraudulent means and devices, and by a corrupt and fraudulent combination and conspiracy. The gist of the action is, the obtaining by the defendant and others and appropriating to their own use a large sum of money, to which they were not entitled, by the false and fraudulent practices detailed, and the demand is for judgment for the amount alleged to have been thus obtained, with interest. It is not in terms. averred that the *13 money, in any legal sense or in equity and good conscience, belonged to the plaintiffs, so that the defendants can be charged with the same as received to their use, or that the wrong was perpetrated directly against the State or the people of. the State, that is, the whole State as a legal entity, and the whole body of the people; but the want of such averment it is claimed is supplied, and the necessity of such averment obviated, by allegations as to the source from which the money came, and the authority and agency by and purposes for which it was procured. The title to and ownership of the money sought to be recovered must determine the right of action, and if the money did not belong to the State, but did belong to some other body having capacity to sue, this action cannot be maintained. (People v. Booth, 32 N.Y., 397.) The eminent senior counsel for the plaintiffs, in his argument in the Supreme Court of the demurrer of another defendant, with copies of which we have been furnished, in answer to a question put as to “ who did own the money,” asserted that the State owned it, and, in substance, conceded that none but the true owner could have an action for its recovery. He says: I believe I have answered the question, Who owns the money ? It is but another way of putting the question, Who can maintain the action? Of course, the.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.Y. 1, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-the-state-of-ny-v-ingersoll-ny-1874.