Seidel v. Cahajla

29 A.2d 628, 129 N.J.L. 314, 1943 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 221
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 7, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 A.2d 628 (Seidel v. Cahajla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seidel v. Cahajla, 29 A.2d 628, 129 N.J.L. 314, 1943 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 221 (N.J. 1943).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

This certiorari is to review a judgment of the First District Court of the City of Paterson summarily dispossessing a tenant. Therefore, the only question which, under our practice, we shall consider on certiorari is whether the District Court had jurisdiction to award the judgment. Degenring v. Kimble, 115 N. J. L. 379; Moreland v. Steen, 89 N. J. L. 383. The affidavit upon which the summons issued alleged a default in the payment of rent, the failure to do interior decorating and to cut the grass and care for flowers and shrubbery and the holding, on the premises, of drinking parties which disturbed the entire neighborhood until long after midnight. Perhaps the latter allegations *315 were intended to cover the statutory grounds which permit such an action against a tenant who “shall be so disorderly as to destroy the peace and quiet oí” other tenants or who “shall willfully destroy, damage or injure” the premises. R. S. 2:32-265. But under Dedo v. Kuser, 103 N. J. L. 223, it is not enough that the tenant’s conduct is disturbing; it must be disturbing to other tenants of the landlord; and this qualifying condition is not alleged in the affidavit and was not met in the proofs taken in the District Court. Indeed, it seems that there were no other tenants of the landlord in the neighborhood. Further, we find neither allegation nor proof that there was willful destruction of the premises or indeed any destruction aside from the frail assertion related above. On July 16th, 1942, the return day named in the summons, the trial was adjourned to July 30th, and after the adjournment the arrears in rent were paid. On July 30th, the adjourned day, the tenant did not appear and the court, according to the certification of the judge to us, gave judgment for possession. The clerk’s docket shows no judgment for possession as of that or any other day. It does contain this strange entry:

“Aug. 18 1942 The plaintiff appeared ready for trial. The defendant not appearing, and no sufficient reason being assigned why he did not appear, and it further appearing by the return endorsed that the summons was duly served, the Court proceeded to hear and determine the cause in the absence of the defendant. Plaintiff offered affidavit on file.

“The evidence being closed and submitted to the Court, judgment was rendered by the Court and is here entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the sum of Dollars debt, and Three & 90/100 dollars cost of suit.”

There was no trial on August 18th, and the judgment here recorded obviously is not a judgment for possession. On that same day, August 18th, 1942, the clerk issued a warrant for removal.

Before that and on the original return day of the summons, July 16th, 1942, the following incidents occurred: (a) the judge certified to us that:

*316 “When the Court discovered that the O. P. A. had not been notified the case was adjourned to July 30th, 1942. Then the landlord said, ‘What about nay rent for July?’ The Court advised the tenant that the rent and costs could be paid into Court disposing of this phase of the ease leaving the disorderly tenant charges to be tried.”

(b) The clerk’s docket shows:

“July 16, 1942 Defendant paid into Court the sum of $34.10 rent & costs in settlement of the above case.

“July 16, 1942 Received from the Clerk the sum of $34.10 in settlement of the above ease. — Lucy Irene Seidel, Landlord.”

We observe that the court undertook to hold over the single question of disorderly tenancy.

The reason assigned by the tenant for not appearing on the adjourned date, July 30th, is that the case had been settled as noted on the docket on July 16th following the court adjournment. R. S. 2:32-269.

The District Court Judge certifies:

“On the 13th day of August, 1942, the Attorney for the Defendant, called to see the Court and explained to the Court the fact that judgment for Possession had inadvertently entered, because the case had been settled and dismissed as of the 16th day of July, 1942. He also further directed the attention of the Court to the fact that the premises in question involved a one family house occupied by the Defendant and that the Landlord had no other tenants in the neighborhood which fact had been called to the Court’s attention on July 16, 1942. The Court thereupon advised counsel that if the money was paid into Court it was probably disposed of. Upon request of counsel for Defendant, E. Oustave Greenwald, whether an order should be prepared or not, that Court advised Mr. Greenwald that if the money was paid into Court no order was necessary.”

We are not particularly concerned with ex parte conversations between the tenant and the judge, but we are concerned with all such matters in the return as show the facts having to do with jurisdiction. Further confusion is injected into the record by a rule which the judge, at the landlord’s *317 instance, issued on August 15th directing the tenant to “show cause * * * on the 18th day of August * * * why the warrant for removal should not issue forthwith and that judgment for possession be given to the said plaintiff, and upon the return of this rule, the said plaintiff shall be permitted to introduce proof and testimony to support the application/ That rule was never disposed of. It came on to be heard on August 18th before a visiting judge who refused to proceed because of doubt as to the status of the case — a state of mind that we can readily understand. What we do not understand is why, if there was already a judgment for possession, such a rule should issue, particularly with a “show cause” why judgment for possession should not be given. There were certain “daily sheets” of which the judge and the clerk had copies and which were the list of causes for the respective day from which the call was made and upon which were made abbreviated and temporary notes of disposition. On the sheets for July 30th opposite the title “Seidel vs. Cahajla” is the notation “Poss. Aug. 13.”

The clerk’s docket is an official court record. R. S. 2:32-223. If the entries do not correctly show the record the District Court judge may be directed to certify the fact. Counsel have apparently mistaken the scope of a writ of certiorari and of supplemental proofs thereunder in such a case. The correct practice for compiling and completing a record for the return to a writ of certiorari directed to a District Court is indicated in Supreme Court rules 163 and 164.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 A.2d 628, 129 N.J.L. 314, 1943 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seidel-v-cahajla-nj-1943.