88 N.J.L. 499 | N.J. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The judicial proceeding sought to he reviewed on this appeal is the award of certain chattels to respondent, Mary Hoeke, on the trial of a statutory claim of property in the Common Pleas.
Me are not aware of any statute or judicial decision in this state sanctioning appeal (corresponding to the common law writ of error) as a legal method of reviewing this purely statutory proceeding. In Levinson v. Godfrey, 79 N. J. L. 212, an appeal from the determination of a claim of property in the District Court was considered sub silenlio, and no doubt the point raised escaped the attention of the court be
Taking up the question itself, it is fundamental that certiorari is the only proper method of review of a special statutory proceeding, especially where, as in this case, no statutory review is provided. Even where an appeal is provided by statute, certiorari lies to the determination of the appellate tribunal. Examples of this are cases of bastardy (Dunn v. Overseer, 32 N. J. L. 275; Ruff v. Kebler, 62 Id. 186); nonsupport (Decker v. McLorinan, 42 Id. 413; O'Shaughnessy v. McLorinan, 43 Id. 410; McLorinan v. Ryno, 49 Id. 603), and summary convictions reviewed by the Common Pleas judge. Newark v. Kazinski, 86 Id. 59. The test is whether the proceeding is statutory and not according to the course of the common law. Elder v. Medical Society, 35 Id. 200, and cases cited; Curtis v. Steever, 36 Id. 305, 306; Hisor v. Van-Diver, 82 Id. 303. With respect to this statutory claim of property, certiorari has been the uniform method of review from an early era in our jurisprudence. Examples of such cases are Baird v. Johnson (1833), 14 Id. 120; Obart v. Letson (1839), 17 Id. 78; Berry v. Chamberlain, 53 Id. 463; Folwell v. Fuller, Id. 572; Kaufhold v. Roth, 74 Id. 61; Gridley v. Decker, 79 Id. 360.
Indeed, in Berry v. Chamberlain, supra, a leading case, Chief Justice Beasley lays stress throughout on the purely statutory character of the' proceeding (see pp. 464, 468) and that resort to it is optional with both parties, and, on p. 466, remarks that as an incident “the entire affair, so far as the law is concerned, is under the supervision of this court through its prerogative writ of certiorari,” and in a recent
The ease of Trimmer v. Bonnell, 65 N. J. L. 66, is relied on as authorizing appeal in this, class of cases, but is manifestly not on the point, as that case related to a suit according to the course of the common law, and not to a statutory proceeding.
We hare dealt with this matter of practice somewhat fully as an intimation to counsel that appeals in cases that should he brought up by certiorari are liable to be dismissed by the court of its own motion, as in Trimmer v. Bonnell, supra, and Corbett v. Lynch, 79 N. J. L. 126.
Tt has been remarked that the merit of the appeal has moved the court to consider it without a, dismissal for the faulty practice. The trial was held with a jury and before one of the judges of the Common Pleas, pursuant to sections 32 and 33 of the Executions act. Comp. Slat., p. 2255. At the conclusion of the evidence the judge directed a verdict for the claimant, and this is attacked on the ground that there was a question of fact for the jury. Whether on such a trial the judge has power to direct, in a proper case is not argued. In Levinson v. Godfrey, 79 N. J. L. 212, already cited, it seems to have been assumed; in Folwell v. Fuller, 53 Id. 572, a verdict was directed, but returned contrary to the direction. While the point is not necessary to the decision of this case, we incline to think that the right to direct exists as in other judicial proceedings when a jury is empaneled.
The direction in the present case, however, was erroneous, as the title was fairly in dispute. Defendant, O’Mara, was in possession of the property, consisting of household furniture and similar articles, and using them for his family in one part of a two-family house where he lived. Mary Hocke, the claimant, was his sister. She and he both testified generally that she had supplied him with the chattels in question, not as a sale or gift, hut as a loan; that occasionally she took
Eor these reasons the direction of a verdict will be set aside.