42 N.Y.S. 484 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
This action was brought in the municipal court of the city of Eochester, and the summons therein was served upon the defendants outside of the corporate limits of that city, but in an adjoining town. Upon the return of the summons, the defendants appeared by their attorney, who objected to the jurisdiction of the court, upon the ground that such process was served outside of the city of Eochester. This objection was overruled, and thereafter
We come, therefore, directly to the main question in the case, which is, did the municipal court of the city of Rochester acquire jurisdiction of the person of the appellant by the summons issuing therefrom, which was served outside of the city of Rochester? A careful examination of the different enactments of the legislature of this state relating to the city of Rochester reveals the fact that this tribunal was created by chapter 196 of the Laws of 1876, section 1 of which reads as follows:
“A court of civil jurisdiction to be called and known as the ‘Municipal Court of the City of Rochester,’ is hereby created and established in and for said city, with the jurisdiction and powers hereinafter provided. Immediately upon the passage of this act there shall be appointed by the governor, by and with the advice and consent of the senate, two judges of said court whose duties shall be to organize and hold said court in said city as hereinafter provided.”
By section 5 it is provided that such court—
“Shall have jurisdiction in all civil actions and proceedings cognizable by law in the justices’ courts of said city and in the justices’ courts of towns, except that in an action arising on contract for the recovery of money only, said municipal court shall have jurisdiction when the sum claimed in the complaint does not exceed $400.”
And it is further provided by section 16 that from and after the passage of the act no person shall be elected to the office of justice of the peace in said city.
By the amended charter of the city, which will be found in chapter 14 of the Laws of 1880, such court is continued as established, with the jurisdiction and powers more particularly specified therein, but
“Inferior local courts of criminal and civil jurisdiction may be established by the legislature; and except -as herein otherwise provided, all judicial officers shall be elected or appointed at such times, and in such manner, as the legislature may direct.”
This section unquestionably furnishes ample authority for the creation by the legislature of tribunals of inferior civil and criminal jurisdiction similar to the municipal court of the city of Rochester and the police court of the same city. But to what locality such tribunals must be limited in the exercise of their jurisdiction is quite another question. It is, however, one which has received considerable attention from the courts of this state, and the decisions-which will now be adverted to must furnish a guide and authority for the conclusion to be reached in the case in hand. In the case of Brandon v. Avery, 22 N. Y. 469, it was held that it was clearly within the constitutional power of the legislature to provide for the election of local magistrates in the villages of this state, but that the jurisdiction to be conferred upon such magistrates must be local and inferior in its nature. And the term “inferior local courts of civil and criminal jurisdiction,” as employed in the constitution, has been defined by high authority to mean courts possessing a jurisdiction localized witliin the territorial limits of the city or village for which they are created, and by the electors of which the incumbents thereof are chosen. See opinion of Dwight, P. J., in People v. Upson, 79 Hun, 87, 29 N. Y. Supp. 615. His opinion says that “the jurisdiction of a strictly local court * * * cannot be extended to persons and subjects without the jurisdiction,” and that the legislature could not change the character of a local court of limited territorial jurisdiction to one of
“The only authority conferred is to establish local and inferior courts. The jurisdiction of a local court must be exercised within the locality, and its process cannot be executed outside of it. Whatever power constitutional justices of the peace may possess to send their process into adjoining towns, no local court created under the clause referred to [Amended Const. 1846, art. 6, § 19] could be vested with that power.” Geraty v. Reid, 78 N. Y. 64-67:
The most recent authority upon this question, to which our attention has been directed, is that of Pierson v. Fries, decided in the Second department, and reported in 3 App. Div., at page 418, 38 N. Y. Supp. 765. That case arose under an act of the legislature {chapter 182, Laws 1892) .creating a city court for the city of Mt. Vernon, in this state, which provided that the summons in any action brought in such court might be served at any place within the county of Westchester, in which county the city of Mt. Vernon is located. The court, in disposing of the case, says that the power of the legislature respecting the jurisdiction of inferior local courts is no longer a debatable question; that such courts, by the act creating them, must be limited in the exercise of their jurisdiction to the locality where they exist; and that the provision of the act relating to the city of Mt. Vernon, which permitted the service of its process outside of the city limits, was clearly in conflict with the provision of the constitution authorizing the creation of inferior local courts, and was, therefore, to that extent, void. Many other authorities of like tenor might be cited in support of the appellant’s contention, but those already referred to apparently furnish ample authority for his position, and make it quite clear, in our opinion, that, in so far as the legislature has attempted to extend the territorial jurisdiction of the municipal court of the city of Bochester beyond the city limits, it has exceeded its constitutional authority, and that, consequently, such court did not obtain jurisdiction of the person of the appellant in this action. We have reached this conclusion with no little hesitation, not by reason of any doubt which we entertain as to its correctness, but rather because of our anxiety to avoid, if possible, the consideration of the power of the legislature to enact a given law, and the adoption of such a construction of the enactment as will render it obnoxious to the fun
Judgment reversed, with costs. All concur.