24 N.Y. 386 | NY | 1862
The judgment cannot be sustained upon the ground upon which it was put by the court below. By the Revised Statutes the Chancellor was charged with the care and custody of the personal estate of all idiots, lunatics, persons of unsound mind and persons incapable of conducting their own affairs in consequence of habitual drunkenness. (2 R.S., p. 52, § 1.) The jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery was a statutory jurisdiction and was exercised principally under the statutes conferring and regulating it. The court originally took jurisdiction of idiots and lunatics as the general delegate of the authority of the Crown as parens patriæ, and by a special authority of the Crown under its sign manual. The jurisdiction was not inherent in the Court of Chancery, or the Chancellor as Chancellor. (2 Story Eq. Jur., §§ 1362-1364, 1335-1337.) The jurisdiction conferred upon the Court of Common Pleas, and in vacation upon the first judge of the county, to take jurisdiction of applications in cases of habitual drunkards made by the overseer of the poor, when the property of the drunkard was less than $250 in value, did not interfere with or divest the jurisdiction conferred generally upon the Chancellor, but simply authorized a special proceeding in a single and special case. (2 R.S., p. 52, §§ 2-4.) The power of the Court of Chancery in these cases, from its long exercise, came to be regarded as a branch of its equity jurisdiction, and as of kin to that exercised by it over infants and others, the wards of the court. Under the Constitution of 1846 an entire new distribution of judicial powers was authorized, and the Court of Chancery was abolished and its powers were delegated to other tribunals. General jurisdiction in law and equity was conferred upon the Supreme Court, and the legislature was authorized to confer equity jurisdiction in special cases upon the county judge, and it was provided that the County Court should have jurisdiction in special cases as the legislature might prescribe. (Const., Art. 5, §§ 3, 14.) In pursuance of this authority, in the first organization of the judiciary and the distribution of judicial power, the legislature, in the "judiciary act" of 1847, enacted that the County Court should have *389
equity jurisdiction, amongst other things, "for the care and custody of lunatics and habitual drunkards residing in the county." (Sess. Laws of 1847, p. 328, § 31.) This act in respect to other parts of the jurisdiction conferred on the County Courts, and within the same reason as this particular branch, to wit, the foreclosure of mortgages, partitions, c., has been held to be constitutional. (Doubleday v. Heath,
The judgment must be sustained, if at all, upon the report of and for the reasons assigned by the referee. The grant of general jurisdiction in the special cases mentioned by section 30 of the Code is utterly repugnant to the idea of a simple continuation and transfer of the restricted and very special jurisdiction of the Common Pleas under the Revised Statutes, and is not therefore affected by the saving provision of section 471 of the Code.
The referee has passed upon the question of fact involved in the issue, and if there was any evidence his conclusions of fact are not reviewable by this court. They were not reviewed by the Supreme Court, by which tribunal alone they were reviewable. If there was no evidence, the decision would be erroneous in law. COMSTOCK, J., in Hoyt v. Thompson's Executor,
Gardiner v. Callender (12 Pick., 374), is in point and decides that when E.H.R., one of the executors of A.S., gave to the executors of W.P. a memorandum as follows: "It is agreed that the sum of $3,235, due from E.H.R. to the estate of W.P., shall be applied on a certain note for $6,000 now held by the representatives of A.S.," the memorandum amounted to a payment on the note and was not merely an executory agreement. The fact that a memorandum in writing was made of the agreement, does not vary its legal effect. It was not required by any law to be in writing. The court, as in Hills v. Mesnard, sought the good sense of the transaction, and to give effect to the sensible arrangement of the parties, holding that it could not be necessary in order to connect the one debt with the other by an agreement in presenti, that there should be the vain formality of passing the money from one party to the other and returning it again to the party from whom it just *393 came, or that a formal release or receipt should be executed. This case is not cited by counsel or alluded to by the court in the subsequent case of Cary v. Bancroft (14 Pick., 315), but the latter was decided upon a ground which distinguished it from the former case; the court holding in the case last cited that the agreement was executory and not executed, requiring some further act to be done before the one note would operate as payment or extinguishment pro tanto of the other. Dehon v.Stetson (9 Met., 341), followed Cary v. Bancroft, and was decided upon the same ground. Another point was in the case, to wit: that one of the partners interested in the debt which it was sought to apply in payment as the individual debt of one of his partners, had not been consulted, and had no knowledge of the contemplated arrangement. Whether such consent was material or necessary is doubtful. See Wallace v. Kelsall (7 M. W., 264), in which it was held, that to an action by three plaintiff for a joint demand, a plea of an accord and satisfaction with one of the plaintiffs by a part payment in cash and a set-off of a debt due from that one to the defendant, was good without alleging any authority from the other two plaintiffs to make the settlement.
There was some evidence tending to prove the fact found by the referee. Evidence was given of the negotiation between the parties upon the subject, and what each party said, and that all parties had acquiesced in the arrangement, or without any arrangement had suffered the debts to remain as they were, without attempting to enforce them for several years. Whether the minds of the parties met upon any terms, and if so what were the terms of such aggregatio mentium was a question of fact for the referee, whose conclusions are final in this court, not having been reviewed by the court below. He has found upon the evidence that the parties did agree that the mutual debts should be applied in cancelment and discharge of each other, so far as they equaled each other in amount and to the amount of the smallest, and that without any further action by them — that is, that the agreement was executed, not executory. Whatever might be our conclusions upon the evidence, were *394 we called upon to pass upon and declare the effect of it, we cannot say there was no evidence. Not only was there some evidence, but it was as strong, if full effect is given to the language proved by the witness, as it was in Gardner v.Callender.
The judgment must be affirmed.
DAVIES, J., also delivered an opinion for affirmance, and all the judges concurred.
Judgment affirmed.