22 Wend. 132 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1839
By the Court,
The objection that a second jury could not be summoned on the disagreement of the first, and a third on the disagreement of the second, was abandoned by the counsel for the plaintiff, on the counsel for the commissioners citing 2 R. S. 458, §26, 2d ed., and the objection confined to the informality of the order and uncertainty of the certificate. The objection that the jury erred on the merits was abandoned as not examinable upon certiorari, on the authority of Birdsall v. Phillips, 17 Wendell, 464.
Was the order in due form ? The order of the 8th of May, under which the proceedings were had, is lost, and is not returned in form, scarcely in substance. Another was then drawn up, as of a previous date, the 28 th of April, which professes to be about the same in substance as that of the gth of May; and the argument may be taken to proceed on that, or the previous order which it resembles ; though it is somewhat difficult to see, from’the return, whether any order is before us which we can notice. The most favorable side for the defendants is, to take the order of the 28th of April as a representative of the order of the 8th of May, which was the one professedly acted on. Is that in due
Then, as to the certificate of the jury. This is intended as a guide to the party who is convicted of the encroachment. In removing it, he is to conform to the certificate, which must, in the words of the statute, “ state the particulars of the encroachment.” 2 R. S. 518, §111, 2d ed. See
I much doubt, however, whether the certificate is properly before us, even if the order be so. The former was made by the jury, and is, by statute, to be filed with the town clerk, who would be the proper officer for certifying it. It is perhaps different with the commissioners’ order. See Bacon’s Abr. tit. Certiorari, (F.) No objection was taken by counsel, to our hearing and disposing of the case on the merits. The order was the judicial act of the commissioners, and they have returned it without objection. Let that be quashed, and the certificate falls of course.
Order quashed.