Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue is whether Seider v Roth (
In this negligence action, plaintiffs seek recovery for personal injuries arising out of a collision between the automobile in which they were riding and one owned by defendant Dean Staples and driven by defendant Scott Staples. Defendants are residents of New Hampshire, where the accident took place.
Personal jurisdiction over defendants is not available in New York. Plaintiffs instead seek to obtain jurisdiction by attaching the insurance obligation owed defendants by their liability insurance carrier, St. Paul Insurance Company, a corporation doing business in New York. This procedure was, of course, first sanctioned in Seider v Roth (
Defendants argue principally that, in light of Shaffer v Heitner (
In Simpson v Loehmann (
Indeed, two appellate courts have written thoughtful opinions holding that the Seider doctrine survives the constitutional principles expressed in the Shaffer case (O’Connor v Lee-Hy Paving Corp., 579 F2d 194, 197-202 [Friendly, J.]; Alford v McGaw,
"Distinctions in the application and withholding of stare decisis require a nice delicacy and judicial self-restraint. At the root of the techniques must be a humbling assumption, often true, that no particular court as it is then constituted possesses a wisdom surpassing that of its predecessors. Without this assumption there is jurisprudential anarchy” (People v Hobson,
The Seider rule well illustrates the principle. It provoked sharp disagreement at its inception; it is still the subject of controversy. The balance of those in support and in opposition to the rule may have shifted, as it may shift again. Yet, if such shifts are reflected in decisional law, stability is lost, and to no commensurate gain. The practical effect of the rule is so insignificant that, in this instance, there is validity in the aphorism, always to be charily applied, that it is more important that the law be settled than that it be settled "correctly”.
Stare decisis, of course, is necessary only because Judges might disagree with the analysis and conclusion of their predecessors. Were there always agreement with the judgments and reasonings of the past, stare decisis would be a superfluous judicial economy doctrine enshrouded in the mysteries of a Latin phrase. But stare decisis is more than that. It is a doctrine born of recognition that judicial chaos would result if every judgment of the past were overturned because it fails to persuade the Judges of the present. True, there may be instances where strict adherence to precedent would be folly. But mere disagreement with the conclusions of the past, absent compelling reasons or changes in circumstances, cannot serve as a sufficient basis for abandoning what are for the transient present considered to be errors of the past, lest courts of the future consider the abandonment to be the error, thus repeating the process and compounding the uncertainty.
The modern doctrine of stare decisis with the flexibility essential if it is to be a socially useful one has never been better stated than by Chief Judge Cardozo in his Nature of the Judicial Process (Cardozo, Nature of the Judicial Process, esp pp 149-152). His teachings of a half century ago bear constant reminder.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). Stare decisis, even without more, requires affirmance, but that doctrine deserves greater support than comes merely from the concept that it is more important for the law to be settled than for it to be settled "correctly”. Furthermore, stare decisis is not well served by comments which in effect subvert the rule of law purportedly upheld.
Law should reflect the convictions of the present more than the past. It follows that one of the truest tests of a principle of law, whether founded on case or statute, is to be ascertained in how it has actually functioned. (See Cardozo, Growth of the Law, pp 112, 114.) We apparently all agree that the dire consequences prophesied by Seider critics have not eventuated.
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Jones and Wachtler concur in Per Curiam opinion; Judge Fuchs-berg concurs in a separate opinion in which Judge Cooke concurs.
Order affirmed, with costs. Question certified answered in the affirmative.
