Petterson v. Van Wart

36 N.Y.S. 1009, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 282
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 21, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 N.Y.S. 1009 (Petterson v. Van Wart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petterson v. Van Wart, 36 N.Y.S. 1009, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 282 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

At the general election held in 1891, the appellant was elected to the office of justice of the peace for the Second judicial district of the city of Brooklyn. The term of his office was four years, and, by the provisions of the law then in force, would have expired on the 30th day of April, 1896. The respondent was, at the last general election, elected as the successor of the appellant. It is the contention of the respondent that the appellant’s term of office was abridged by section 3 of article 12 of the constitution, which took effect on January 1,1895, and that, pursuant to the provisions of that instrument, the appellant’s term of office expired on the 31st day of December, 1895.

The section referred to, so far as it is applicable to the case before us, is as follows:

“All elections of city officers Including * * * judicial officers of inferior local courts elected in any city or part of a city Shall be held on the Tuesday succeeding the first Monday in November in an odd numbered year and the term of every such officer shall expire at the end of an odd numbered year. «= 8= <= The terms of all such officers which under existing laws would expire in an even numbered year and before the end thereof are abridged so as to expire at the end of the preceding year. This section shall not applj * * * to any judicial officer, except judges and justices of inferior local courts.”

The special term held that the provision quoted was applicable to the appellant, and tins decision must clearly be affirmed unless the appellant is correct in his claim that he is not a judge or justice of an inferior local court. The appellant’s contention is that he is a justice of the peace; that the constitution, as amended in 1869, provided for the election in cities of two distinct officers,—one, a “justice of the peace,” and the other, a “judge or justice of an inferior court,” or, as they are sometimes designated, “district court justices”; that the distinction between those officers is clearly maintained in the constitution and laws of the state, and that the names are descriptive.of particular officers, and not of their functions; that the distinguishing [1010]*1010feature of a justice of the peace as it has existed since the creation of the state, and as contemplated in the constitution, is the combination in the same individual of a civil and criminal jurisdiction; that the act pursuant to which the appellant was elected (chapter 583, Laws 1888) designated the officer as a “justice of the peace,” and conferred upon him that double jurisdiction which has always been the characteristic feature of that office. This argument has received our careful attention; but we are of the opinion tüat it is not applicable to the case before us. The particular designation given to the office in the statute is of very little importance in determining the question presented. As was said by Judge Peckham in People v. Terry, 108 N. Y. 1, 14 N. E. 815, “it is not the name in such case, but the jurisdiction of the court, which is material; and, so long as that is inferior and local, the name given to the person who is to preside in it is not generally important.” That was said in reference to a statute creating a court of lopal jurisdiction, and authorizing the election of a judicial officer to preside over it, who was designated as a “justice of the peace,” and to whom was given, within the designated locality, “the usual powers of justices of the peace of towns” in relation to crimes, and also in civil actions. Moreover, the constitution, in article 6, § 22, refers to justices of the peace as local judicial officers. It is in harmony with this provision to hold that a justice of the peace in a city is a judicial officer of a local court, and, in a popular sense, there would be no difficulty in deciding that a justice of the peace who presided in a district court in a city was a “judge or justice of an inferior local court.” That a court of a justice of the peace is “an inferior court,” within the meaning of the constitution, is not a debatable question. Its inferiority among the other courts created by the constitution, and authorized to be created by the legislature, appears from its limited local jurisdiction, and its being a court not of record.

But, referring more particularly to the argument of the appellant’s counsel, we are of the opinion that, under the statutes applicable to the office held by the appellant, he is a “justice of an inferior local court,” and not a “justice of the peace,” within the meaning of those terms as used in the constitution. The office was created by chapter 125, Laws 1849. That act was entitled “An act to establish courts of civil and criminal jurisdiction in the city of Brooklyn.” Section 35 authorized the common council to divide the city into two or more districts, for each of which a justice of the peace was to be elected, who should hold his office for the term of four years from the 1st day of May next after his election, and whose jurisdiction within said city was declared to be that possessed by law by justices of the peace of towns. This act was amended by chapter 102, Laws 1850. The said justices were there declared to have a jurisdiction in civil actions like that exercised by the justices of the peace of the towns of the state. The character of the courts thus created was determined by the court of appeals in Geraty v. Reid, 78 N. Y. 64. They were there held to be local courts. This conclusion was based upon the provision of the constitution of 1846, which provided specifically for the election of [1011]*1011justices of the peace in the towns of the state only, and authorized the legislature to create inferior local courts in cities. The amended judiciary article of the constitution adopted by the people at the general election in 1869 provided, not only for the election of justices of the peace in the towns of the state, but also provided that justices of the peace and district-court justices should be elected in the different cities of the state, in such manner and with such powers and for such terms, respectively, as should be prescribed by law. Article 6, § 18. That provision was not self-executing, but required legislation to carry it into effect. Local courts existing at the adoption of that article continued until altered or abolished by the legislature. The local courts of justices of the peace thus continued in the city of Brooklyn, at least, until the enactment of chapter 583, Laws 1888; and there can be no question that up to the date of the passage of that act there were no justices of the peace in the city of Brooklyn in the sense claimed by the appellant, but that the officers created by the law of 1849 were justices of “inferior local courts.”

We come, therefore, to the consideration of the law of 1888, and the question presented depends upon whether that law abolished the old court, and created a new office of a different character, or whether it recognized and continued the local justices’ courts then existing in the city. We are of the opinion that the latter is the only construction that can be given to this law. The act is entitled “An act to revise and combine in a single act all existing special and local laws affecting public interests in the city of Brooklyn.” It does not in terms repeal the acts of 1849 and 1850, which I have referred to; nor does it in terms create a new local court or judicial officer having jurisdiction in civil actions, nor does it abolish any.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 N.Y.S. 1009, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petterson-v-van-wart-nyappdiv-1896.