Willey v. Shaver

1 Thomp. & Cook 324
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Thomp. & Cook 324 (Willey v. Shaver) 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
Willey v. Shaver, 1 Thomp. & Cook 324 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

J. Potter, J.

This is an appeal from an order made at special term, upon a motion by plaintiff to be allowed his costs of appeal to the general term, and involves a decision of the question, whether the certificate of the good faith of the defendants, granted by county judge Smith on the trial in county court, in doing the act complained of, exempts the defendants from liability for the costs of the appeal to the general term, where judgment was rendered against them.

It is plain the decision of that question must rest upon that certificate alone, and not at all upon the subsequent certificate given by county judge Smith of the good faith of the defendant’s appeal, or. upon the certificate of the justice of the peace, of the bad faith of defendants in doing the act complained of.

The last certificate of Judge Smith was not given upon the trial, . nor while holding a court, and does 'not relate to the good faith of the act complained of, but to the good faith of the appeal.

There is no provision of law for granting a certificate of bad faith in this class of cases, and no occasion for such certificate; for, unless a school officer obtains a certificate of good faith, he will be subjected to the costs of an unsuccessful litigation, according to the general provisions of the Code, § 304, which allows, in actions of this character, costs to the prosecuting party.

It is provided by § 6, title 13, of chapter 555 of the Laws of 1864 (Code of Public Instruction), that “in any action against a school officer or officers * * * for any act performed by virtue of or under color of their offices * * * , and which might [327]*327have been the subject of an appeal to the superintendent, no costs shall be allowed to the plaintiff in cases where the court shall certify that it appeared on the trial that the defendants acted in good faith.”’

It was assumed upon the argument of this appeal, and clearly appears from the papers and from subdivision 7, section 1, title 12 of that act, that the act or proceeding of defendants complained of might have been the subject of an appeal to the superintendent of public instruction.

It will not be necessary to devote any time or space to that subject; but assuming such to be the case, I shall simply consider whether the case contains the other requisites for the exemption of defendants from costs, with a judgment against them upon an appeal brought by themselves, notwithstanding § 304 of the Code.

The plaintiff’s right to the costs of general term depends upon the answer to this question: Is the judgment of affirmance by the general term in the same action that was commenced by the plaintiff against the defendants before the justice, and tried in the county court in which the certificate was granted ?

An action is a judicial proceeding which will, if prosecuted effectually, result in a judgment. People v. County Judge of Rensselaer, 13 How. Pr. 398; People v. Colborne, 20 id. 380.

It is instituted by the service of a summons, warrant, or the voluntary appearance of the parties and joining of issue in a justice’s court; or by a summons in a court of record. 2 R. S. 227; Code, § 127. An action can only be commenced in these ways.

This action was commenced in a justice’s court in one of these ways. It passed thence into the county court, and thence into this court, where the rights of the parties were determined by the judgment of this court.

Ho new or other process by which alone actions can be commenced was ever served. .

Its successive transfers to the different courts were effected by means of notices of appeal from the judgment entered in an action commenced by the service of process provided for the commencement of actions.

These notices of appeal are not permitted to be served upon the parties, but upon the attorneys who have appeared in the actions, and upon the clerk of the court in whose custody are the proceedings in the action, or in case of appeal from justice’s court, the no[328]*328tice of appeal is served upon the justice who has the record and proceedings in the action and upon the party, as" no attorney is known in that court.

No new pleadings or issues are required upon the appeal. They remain the same as in the court where the action was commenced.

Section 326 of the Code, providing that the title of the action shall not be changed in consequence of the appeal, recognizes the principle that the action continues, and was intended to prevent the change in the relative position of the parties that was formerly practiced when reviews of judgments were effected through writs of error.

But one certificate can be given in the course of an action, and that must be based upon the facts as shown by the evidence upon the trial. No other facts than those proved upon the trial can be presented upon the appeal. No provision of law is made for the granting of a second or different certificate, or for its modification or revocation in any stage of the action subsequent to the trial.

The certificate only relates to the good faith of the school officers in the performance of the act which forms the subject of the action. It has no relation to the good faith of the parties in prosecuting or defending the action or in bringing or defending appeals in the course of the action.

If the act of the defendants complained of, was done in good faith, and so certified by the court upon the trial, that good faith is not changed or affected by the bringing of an appeal from the result of that trial, under the advice of mistaken counsel or the influence of bad motives. Neither the language nor the terms of the statute are consistent with a different construction of it.

The legislature, appreciating the importance of maintaining schools and the difficulties which trustees and other officers of school districts "had to encounter and the consequent liability to expensive litigation, have exempted them from the general liability for costs in cases where they have acted in good faith, and have denied to the plaintiff in such cases the costs of the action, that incentive to litigation, even though he succeed.

To hold that such exemption from costs only applies to the costs in the trial court would tend to compel defendants, acting not for themselves but for the public good, to submit to the first decision, however unjust or erroneous, at the peril of having to pay costs for their efforts to obtain a correct decision.

[329]*329I think it clear that the legislature intended to exempt defendants, school officers, who have acted in good faith, from costs throughout all the stages of the action.

This view, I think, is sustained by the case of Clark v. Tunnicliff, 38 N. Y. 58, and also in ex parte Bennett, 3 Denio, 175.

The former is like the case under consideration in its leading characteristics.

The action was against defendants, who were trustees of a school district, for taking and selling, under their warrant, the plaintiff's property for a tax. The plaintiff had a verdict, and the exceptions taken at the trial were heard and reviewed in the first instance at the general term, upon the motion of defendants.

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Related

People ex rel. Yale v. Eckler
26 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 609 (New York Supreme Court, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Thomp. & Cook 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willey-v-shaver-nysupct-1873.