37 How. Pr. 140 | Oneida County Court | 1868
In justices’ courts, the defendant failing to appear, the plaintiff cannot take judgment by default, he must prove his case and this must be by competent and legal evidence. (Code sec. 64, subdivision 8; Jones agt. Pridham, 3 E. D. Smith, 155; Perkins agt. Stebbins, 29 Barb., 523; Armstrong agt. Smith, 44 id., 128.)
It is difficult to determine on what principle the witness arrived at the amount of damages sustained by plaintiffs; the only'evidence on that point, being that of Henry Baxter, as follows: 11 The damage to the plaintiffs for removing these bolts out of their possession is ten dollars.”
Under the rules of evidence as laid down by all elementary writers, and as established by the universal practice of the courts, this would hardly be considered sufficient to prove the measure of damages in cases of this kind.
But the most important question involved in this case, and perhaps, the one most difficult of solution, is in reference to the authority of the justice to try the cause after a demand had been duly made on the part of the defendant for a trial by a jury of twelve men, embracing as it does the . constitutional right of litigants to trial by jury.
There can be no dispute, I think, that a justice of the peace has no' authority to empannel a jury of twelve men for the trial of a cause. Juries in justices’ courts are limited to six men. (3 R. S., 5 ed., p. 441; 2 Waite’s Law and Pr. p. 593).
In Dater agt. Loomis, (General Term decision in the 5th district, not reported). Mullin, J., says: There is no doubt as to the power of the legislature to enlarge the jurisdiction
Then had the defendant a right to a trial by a jury of twelve men? If so, the justice should have entered a judgment of discontinuance of the action, and left the plaintiff's to prosecute their claim before another tribunal.
. Selden, J., in (Treason agt. Keteltas, (17 N. Y.., 491) says: “'The right of trial by jury in a proper case, is absolute, and any decision of the court overruling or denying such right, would be plainly erroneous, but it is a right which can be waived, and if a party who is entitled to it, enter voluntarily upon a trial by the court without objection, he would ordinarily no doubt, be understood as consenting to that mode of trial.”
In Dater agt. Loomis (supra) the court says: “ The right of trial by jury, secured by the constitution, applies as well to civil as to criminal cases, and as the court of appeals have held in Wynehamer agt. The Leople, 13 N. Y., 378) that the jury intended by the clause of the constitution referred to, was a jury composed of twelve men; the same number must form the jury in civil cases.”
It is claimed on the part of the appellant that this is one of the cases coming within sec. 2, of art. 1 of the constitution,which provides:
“That trial by jury in all cases in which it has been heretofore used shall remain inviolate forever.”
The word “ cases'” in the the section of the constitution referred to is to be deemed synonomous with “ causes.” (Beecher agt. Allen, 5 Barb., 173 ; Benson agt. Cromwell, 26 id., 218 ; Kundolf agt. Thalheimer, 12 N. Y., 426).
Actions for the delivery of personal property under the Code are a substitute for the actions of replevin under the old practice, and are the same in nature if not in name. (Roberts agt. Randall, 5 How., 327 ; Rockwell agt. Saunders, 19 Barb., 481; Nichols agt. Michael, 23 N. Y., 269). And the constitutional right of trial by jury, secured to persons in actions of replevin, remain to them in actions under the Code for the possession of personal property.
Prior to the constitution of 1846, replevin was one of the causes of action, of which a justice of the peace had no jurisdiction, but were only cognizable by courts of record. And so it remained in reference to such actions under the Code, down to I860, when the legislature conferred such jurisdiction in actions where the value of the property claimed did not exceed $100.
Juries in courts of record prior to the adoption of the constitution of 1846, were composed of twelve men, and so have remained to the present time, and the word jury, as used in art. 1, sec. 2, means a common law jury of. twelve men. (13 N. Y., 427 and 458 ; 12 id., 190; 1 Bouv., Law Dic., 747; 18 Barb., 451; 2 Parker, C. R., 312.)
This being one of the cases wherein á party was entitled to a trial by a jury, prior to the constitution of 1846, the same right remained thereafter by virtue of art. 1, sec. 2, in the same manner as it had theretofore existed and it was incompetent for the legislature to deprive a party of such right. But I do not understand that such was the intention, and it is certainly not the letter of the law of 1860; for nowhere does it deny the right of a party to a trial by a jury of twelve men. Nor does it limit the trial of such cases to justices’ courts, it simply leaves the parties to elect to waive their constitutional right, and try in a justices’ court, or to demand a trial in a court of record, where a jury of twelve
I am of opinion that the justice erred in refusing to discontinue the suit upon motion of defendant, and for that reason the judgment should be reversed, and it is so ordered.