People v. Brooks

4 Denio 469
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 4 Denio 469 (People v. Brooks) 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 v. Brooks, 4 Denio 469 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847).

Opinion

Beardsley, J.

In penal suits, unless a general form of declaring is expressly authorized by statute, the declaration must set forth the particular acts or omissions which constitute the cause of action and by which the alleged penalty was incurred. This is the invariable rule. (1 Chit. Pl. 405; Cole v. Smith, 4 John. 193; Bigelow v. Johnson, 13 id. 428; Collins v. Ragrew, 15 id. 5.) But we have a statute which dispenses, in such cases, with any statement in the declaration of the special matter,” and makes it sufficient to allege the defendant’s indebtedness in the amount of such penalty or forfeiture, to the officer, person or body, to whose use the same is given; whereby an action accrued according to the provisions of such statute, naming the subject matter thereof, in the following form, ‘ According to the provisions of the statute concerning sheriffs,’ naming the section, title and chapter of such statute, as the case may require, or in some other similar terms referring to such statute.” (2 R. S. 482, §§ 10, 11.) To this extent certainty and particularity are still requisite; the statute may be indicated by any intelligible reference to its subject matter; but the particular section or sections imposing the penalty, together with the title and chapter containing the same, must be stated truly.

The declaration in this case alleges that the action accrued to the said plaintiffs according to the provisions of the statute 1 Of the marine hospital and its funds,: to wit, of sections ten and twenty-two of chapter fourteen, title four, of part first of the revised statutes of the state of New-York.” Title four here referred to, is the said statute “ Of the marine hospital and its funds,” (1 R. S. 444,) and this action is alleged, in the declaration, to have accrued according to sections ten and twenty-two of said title. But the title has only twelve sections, and there is a palpable error in the averment that the action accrued, in any respect, according to section twenty-two of this title. How this error arose will presently appear.

The seventh section of said title declares that the health commissioner shall be entitled to receive the following sumq [472]*472from the master of every vessel that shall arrive in the port of New-York, namely:

“ 1. From the master of every,vessel from a foreign port, for himself and each cabin passenger, one dollar and fifty cents; for each steerage passenger, mate, sailor or mariner, one dollar.

“ 2. From the master of each coasting vessel, for each person on board, twenty-five cents; but no coasting vessel from the states of New-Jersey, Connecticut and Rhode Island, shall pay for more than one voyage in each month, computing from the first voyage in each year.” These moneys are denominated “ hospital moneys,” and were appropriated by said title to the use of “the marine hospital” on the easterly side of Staten Island. (§ 8.) By the tenth section of said title it is declared that every master of a coasting vessel, who omits to pay such hospital moneys as may be demandáble under said title, shall forfeit the sum of one hundred dollars.

This statute, it should be observed, gives a penalty for the non-payment of twenty-five cents for each person, whether passenger or one of the crew, on board such coasting vessel, which payment was to be made to the health commissioner for the use of the marine hospital on Staten Island. But in 1831 the system then in force for the collection and application of hospital moneys underwent several important modifications. By the act of that year, entitled “ An act to provide' for sick and disabled seamen,” certain persons were designated, and provision was made for the choice of others, as “ the trustees of the seamen’s fund and retreat in the city of New-York.” The act also declares that “ the respective sums of money now levied and collected by law upon masters, mates, mariners and seamen, arriving at the city and port of New-York, shall be collected and paid over to the” said trustees. (Laws of 1831, p. 273, § 1.) The trustees were to erect or hire a building to be called the “ seamen’s retreat,” which was “ to be exclusively appropriated to and for the use of sick and disabled seamen,” ($ 2,) and to this object the moneys to be collected and paid “ upon masters, mates, mariners and seamen” were to be applied. So much of section seven of title four of the revised statutes, already [473]*473referred to, as authorized the commissioners of health “ to receive and collect hospital money from masters, mariners or seamen,” was repealed by said act of 1831; but the act declares that nothing therein contained shall prevent said health commissioners from collecting from the master of every vessel such sums as may be due from such master for any steerage or cabin passenger as provided in” said seventh section. (§ 9.) Thus the hospital moneys to be paid by masters of vessels were severed ; the part payable on passengers remaining as before, to be paid to the health commissioners; but that which was payable 11 upon masters, mates, mariners and seamen,” was to be paid to the trustees of the seamen’s fund and retreat. (§ 11.)

The rates of payment to be made by masters of vessels from foreign ports, have undergone various changes since 1831, (Laws 1843, p. 284; Laws 1844, p. 477; Laws 1845, p. 249;) although the law, as to coasting vessels has, I believe, in this respect, remained unchanged. By the act of 1831, the moneys payable to the trustees of the seamen’s fund and retreat, were to be collected by the president of said trustees, who was also thereby authorized to sue for the penalties imposed by law on masters of coasting vessels for not paying any hospital money.” (§ 11.)

Assuming the validity of the statutes which have been referred to, the defendant, as master of the Nimrod, was required to make payment of hospital moneys at the time when this action is supposed to have accrued, as follows:

1. The amount payable on bis passengers to the health commissioners; and 2. The amount payable on the crew of his vessel, to the president of said trustees, to be expended by them. And for an omission to do either he was liable to a penalty of one hundred dollars.

The hospital moneys demanded in this case were such as were supposed to be payable on the crew of the Nimrod, and which, by the terms of the act of 1831, were to be paid to the president of said trustees, and not to the commissioners of health, as directed by the revised statutes. The action therefore accrued, if it accrued at all, under the act of 1831, as well as under the [474]*474revised statutes. But the declaration makes no mention of the act of 1831, nor does it contain any intelligible reference to its provisions. It however does allege that the action accrued according to section twenty-two as well as section ten, of the title of the revised statutes which has been mentioned. This we have seen was a palpable error, the title containing but twelve sections in all.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Denio 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brooks-nysupct-1847.