People v. Nolan

63 How. Pr. 271, 10 Abb. N. Cas. 471
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 How. Pr. 271 (People v. Nolan) 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. Nolan, 63 How. Pr. 271, 10 Abb. N. Cas. 471 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1882).

Opinion

Westbrook, J.

The complaint avers that at an election held in and for the city of Albany on the second Tuesday of April, 1882, “ the above named John Swinburne was, as the plaintiffs allege upon information and belief, by the greatest number of legal votes cast at such election, duly and legally elected mayor of said city of Albany for the term of two years, to commence on the first Tuesday of May, 1882, and this action is brought upon the relation of the said John Swinburne. That notwithstanding the election of the said John Swinburne to said office by the greatest number of legal votes cast at said election, the defendant, Michael 1ST. Nolan, has, as plaintiffs allege on their information and belief, usurped and intruded into, and now unlawfully holds and exercises within said city, the office of mayor of said city of Albany, and unlawfully claims and assumes to be the mayor of said city, and to have the right to exercise the duties of the office for the term of two years from the first Tuesday of May, 1882.”

[273]*273The relief demanded by the complaint is that the said John Swinburne may be adjudged to have been duly elected mayor of the city of Albany, as is therein averred, and that the defendant ISTolan has no such right to hold said office of mayor after the first Tuesday of May, 1882, as he claims and pretends to have, “ and that the plaintiffs may recover of the defendant the costs of this action, and that the defendant be evicted and excluded from said office, and be adjudged to pay to the plaintiff a fine of $2,000.”

The affidavit of the defendant, upon which the present motion to make the complaint more definite and certain and for a bill of particulars is founded, alleges that at the charter election held in and for the city of Albany on the second Tuesday of April, 1882, all the votes cast for the office of mayor of said city, with the exception of two, were given either to the relator, John Swinburne, or to the defendant, Michael 1ST. ISTolan. That according to the official canvass of the votes cast for said office, and which canvass was in all respects conducted according to law, it was ascertained and declared that the defendant had received 9,889 votes, and the relator 9,221 votes. “ That there are seventeen wards and thirty-eight election districts in the city of Albany, and a poll was held, and votes were received for the office of mayor at such charter election, in each and every of said wards and districts, numbering in the aggregate, as appears from the final canvass, 18,562, votes.” That as the defendant “has no knowledge or information of the particular grounds, or reasons, or facts, on which the relator bases his claim, or allegation, in the complaint, that he 6 was by the greatest number of legal votes cast at such election duly and legally elected mayor of said city of Albany,’ * * * or what he intends or expects to prove in order to sustain such claim or allegation, and to overthrow the official canvass of the votes-cast at said election, and the official determination and declaration lawfully made' as aforesaid, that the defendant had been [274]*274duly elected mayor of said city,” he asks that the complaint should he made more definite, and for a bill of particulars.

Is the defendant, upon the facts which have been stated, entitled to have the complaint made more definite and certain, and also to a particular statement of the facts upon which the plaintiffs rely to maintain their action ?

First. Should the complaint be made more definite and certain ?

A complaint in the precise form with the one in this case was held, in The People ex rel. Crane agt. Ryder (12 N. Y., 433), good on demurrer.

• The same form was also adopted and used in The People agt. Cook (14 Barb., 250; 8 N. Y., 67), and in The People agt. Thacher (55 N. Y., 525), and is the one in general use in actions of this character.

It is claimed, however, on the part of the defendant, that, though this form of complaint is good-on demurrer, yet under section 546 of the Code, he is entitled to have it made more definite and certain. Is this claim well founded ?

The section of the Code referred to reads as follows: “ When one or more denials or allegations contained in the pleading are so indefinite or uncertain that the precise meaning or application thereof is not apparent, the court may require the pleading to be made definite and certain, by amendment.” It can hardly be said that the complaint in this action is either “indefinite or uncertain.” Tim title to an office depends upon the votes cast, and when a party avers in the pleading that he has received the greatest number of legal votes given at an election for such office, he has, if he be eligible thereto, averred the existence of the only fact which makes him its incumbent. It is true, that in making an averment in this general form, the party does not state all the circumstances upon which its truth depends, but in alleging that he has received the greatest number of legal votes given cat an election, he has charged the existence of a fact, and it has been held (Hyatt agt. McMahan, 25 Barb., 457), that, [275]*275“ in alleging a fact, it is not necessary to state circumstances as merely tend to prove the fact,” and also that an averment in the general form adopted in the complaint is the averment of a fact, and not of a conclusion of law.” Thus, also, in Williams agt. Wilson (8 Adol. & Ell., 314), it was decided: It is an elementary rule in pleading that, when a state of facts is relied on, it is enough to allege it simply, without setting out the subordinate facts, which are the means of producing it, or the evidence sustaining the allegation. Thus, in a case very familiar and about identical with the present, if a trespass be justified by a plea of highway, the pleader never states how the locus m quo became highway; and if the plaintiffs claim that the loous in quo "x" * * had ceased to be such at the time alleged in the declaration, he simply puts in issue the fact of its being a highway at that time, without alleging the particular mode by which he intends to show, in proof, that it had before then ceased to be such.”

But the precise point was held in People agt. Ryder (12 N. Y., 433), before cited. The court, per Marvin, J. (page 437), says : “ The Code requires that the complaint contain a plain and precise statement of facts constituting a cause of action, without unnecessary repetition (Section 142). This rule is substantially as it existed prior to its enactment in actions at law. Chitty says, in general, whatever circumstances are necessary to constitute the cause of complaint, or the ground of the defense, must be stated in the pleadings, and' all beyond is surplusage; facts only are to be stated, and not" arguments or inferences or matter of law, in which respects the pleadings at law appear to differ materially from those in equity (1 Ch. Pl., 245). At page 266 he says it is a most important principal of the law of pleading that in alleging the fact it is unnecessary to state such circumstances as merely tend to prove the truth of it. The dry allegation of the fact, without detailing a variety of minute circumstances which constitute the evidence of it will suffice. The object of the pleadings is to arrive at a specific issue upon a given [276]

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Related

People v. McClellan
124 A.D. 215 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)
McCarron v. Sire
3 N.Y.S. 659 (City of New York Municipal Court, 1888)
Rice v. Rockefeller
1 N.Y.S. 222 (New York Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 How. Pr. 271, 10 Abb. N. Cas. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nolan-nysupct-1882.