People v. White

24 Wend. 518
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 28, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 24 Wend. 518 (People v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. White, 24 Wend. 518 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1840).

Opinion

After advisement, the following opinion was delivered :

By the Court,

Bronson, J.

The questions arising on the bill of exceptions were considered when this case was before us on a former occasion. 22 Wendell, 167. Those points are now only made pro forma, and we have nothing to add in relation to them.

The only question mentioned on the argument, was one in relation to the organization of the courts before which the prisoner was indicted and tried. It is insisted on his behalf that the aldermen of the city of New-York could not rightfully sit in those courts. It is not denied that the aldermen have been declared, by law, judges of the criminal courts of the city and county of New-York; but it is said, that the acts of the legislature conferring this authority, are repugnant to the constitution, and therefore void. That ques[525]*525tion we have just considered in the case of The People v. Varian and others ; and we do not think it necessary to add any thing to what has already been said. We entertain no doubt that the statutes in question are yalid, and that the aldermen were fully authorized to sit in the courts of general sessions and oyer and terminer, where the indictment was found and tried.

II. But if we are mistaken in saying that the statutes are valid, there is another principle which must control this case. If the aldermen were not judges de jure, they were, at the least, judges de facto, with color of legal title ; and no principle is better settled than that the acts of such persons are valid when they concern the public, or the rights of third persons who have an interest in the act done. It would be impossible to maintain the supremacy of the laws, if individuals were at liberty, in this col- [ *526 ] lateral manner, to ’question the authority of those who, in fact, hold public offices under color of legal title. Where there is a plain usurpation of an. office without any show .of title, the acts of the intruder will undoubtedly be void, both in relation to individuals and the public. But where there is color of lawful title, the officer must be obeyed and his acts respected, until judgment of ouster is pronounced against him in the proper proceeding for that purpose. The government may try the right by quo loarranto ; and the title of the officer may also be questioned where he is a party, and is sued for an act done which he can only justify as an officer. Fowler v. Beebe, 9 Mass. R. 231. But this is a case where officers having apparent authority to do the act, have rendered judgment between the people and the prisoner, and neither party can, in this collateral way, call in question the title of the judges. If there had been judgment of acquittal, it would have concluded the people, and the prisoner could not have been further prosecuted.

To hold that the acts of such officers as I have mentioned are not binding, as between third persons, would lead to the most serious consequences. No man would be safe in taking a title until he had examined the commission of the judge or other public officer who had done any act upon which the validity of the title depended, and had then gone from the commission up to. the source from which the officer derived his authority. We have recently rendered judgment of ouster against a county clerk—The People v. Vail, 20 Wendell, 12—and yet it cannot admit of a doubt, that the acts which he did while in under colour of election, such as the recording of deeds, administering oaths, entering verdicts, and the like, are just as valid as they would have been had the judgment been the other way. Still more recently, we have pronounced judgment of ouster against a police justice of the city of Albany, The People v. Kane, 23 Wendell, 414; but those who executed his mandates while he held under the forms of law, are as perfectly protect[526]*526ed as though there had been no defect in his title ; and his orders and judgments, so far as they operate between other parties, are as valid and effectual as though *he had been an officer de jure. These [ *527 ] cases are only mentioned by way of example. The rule is universal.

It was suggested at the bar that the rule did not apply in the case of a person exercising a judicial office ; but no case to that effect was mentioned, and it would be strange if one could be found. The question has, no doubt, most commonly arisen in relation to ministerial officers, but, on looking into several of the cases, I find no such distinction as that which the counsel supposes should exist. In The King v. Lisle, Andrews, 163, it was said, that the rule comprehended both “judicial and ministerial acts;” and in McInstry v. Tanner, 9 Johns. R. 135, it was objected on a certiorari to reverse a judgment, that the justice who rendered it was constitutionally disqualified to hold the office; and it was answered that had the objection been well founded in point of fact, “ it might well be questioned whether the court could take notice of such an objection, in this way, since we are to intend that the justice acted under a regular commission; and he has not been put to answer for an unconstitutional exercise of power.” Now, here the commission of the aldermen is' written in the statute book, and surely no one can question their title on a writ of error. It must be tried in another form. See also Viner’s Abr. Officer and Offices, (G. 4,) and Harris v. Jays, Cro. Eliz. 699, where it is said, that the law favors acts of one in a reputed authority.” In Bucknam v. Ruggles, 15 Mass. R. 180, the court said the rule extended to all public officers, and that they could discern no reason for restraining it; and in Wilcox v. Smith, 5 Wendell, 231, it was applied in the case of a judicial officer. It would be strange, indeed, if the judgment or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction could be impeached on the ground that a flaw had been discovered in the commission of the judge.

We are of opinion, upon both grounds, that the objection taken by the prisoner’s counsel to the title of aldermen cannot prevail. Judgment affirmed.

The case was thereupon removed into the court for the correction of errors, where it was argued by

*D. Graham, jun. S. Stevens, for the prisoner. [ *528 ]

J. R. Whiting, (district attorney) and Willis Hall, (attorney general,) for the people.

After advisement the following opinions were delivered:

By the Chanobliob. Several questions were raised in the supreme [528]*528court, and have also been discussed in this court upon the writ of error; some of which relate to the organization of the court and the jurisdiction of the officers before whom the trial was had, and others to the legality of the decisions made in the progress of the trial. This last class of questions I shall first proceed to consider.

The first of this class is as to the right of the court to proceed with the trial after one of the judges, who was present at the commencement of such trial, had left the benchadmitting that the remaining judges would have been legally competent to hold a court of oyer and terminer and to try the offence, if the trial had commenced before them alone.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Wend. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-white-nycterr-1840.