111 N.Y. 544 | NY | 1888
The case of Frees v. Ford (
The rule declared in Frees v. Ford, that the residence of the defendant in the county is a jurisdictional fact which must be averred in a complaint in an action in the *547 County Court, brought under the judiciary act of 1847, would seem to be equally applicable to an action brought since the constitutional amendment of 1873, and the enactment of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure, defining the jurisdiction of County Courts. The amendment of 1873 declares that the County Courts shall have original jurisdiction in all cases where the defendants reside in the county, in which the damage claimed shall not exceed $1,000. This language, and that of section 340 of the Code, so far as relevant to the present inquiry, is substantially the same as the thirtieth section of the judiciary act of 1847, and if an averment of residence of the defendant in the county was essential under the act of 1847, the mere fact that the jurisdiction of County Courts is now defined by the Constitution, but in language substantially identical with the language of that act, would not seem to furnish a sufficient reason for changing the rule of pleading.
But the counsel for the plaintiff relies upon sections 481, 488 and 498 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and especially upon section 488, defining the causes of demurrer, in support of his contention that in an action in the County Court an averment in the complaint of the residence of the defendant within the jurisdiction is no longer necessary. Section 481 is the general section, applicable to both the Supreme and County Court, specifying what a complaint must contain, and there is no specification which requires any averment as to the residence of the parties. But the prescription in this section, of matters which must be averred in the complaint, is not in terms exclusive. Section 488 authorizes a defendant to demur to a complaint where one or more of eight objections specified "appear upon the face thereof," and among these objections are objections to the jurisdiction. Section 498 authorizes the objections specified in section 488 to be taken by answer where they do not appear on the face of the complaint. It is insisted that it does not appear on the face of the complaint that the defendant, at the commencement of the action, was not a resident of the county in which the action was *548
brought, and that this jurisdictional fact may exist, although not stated therein, and consequently that the absence of jurisdiction not being disclosed on the face of the pleading, the complaint is not demurrable under section 488, and that the case is one where the objection should be taken by answer under section 498. This argument is not without plausibility or force. But when we recur to the principle upon which the validity of judgments of courts of limited or inferior jurisdiction is determined, we think it may fairly be held that the sections of the Code referred to do not affect the rule declared in Frees
v. Ford. In Peacock v. Bell (1 Saund. 73), it is said that "nothing shall be intended to be without the jurisdiction of a Superior Court but that which specially appears to be so; and, on the contrary, nothing shall be intended to be within the jurisdiction of an inferior court but that which is so expressly alleged." This statement of the rule has been frequently approved. The rule has been applied in many cases in the Supreme Court of the United States to test the validity of judgments rendered in the Circuit Courts of the United States. The jurisdiction of those courts of suits between individuals is made, by the act of Congress of 1789, to depend upon the alienage of one of the parties, or upon the fact that the plaintiff is a citizen of the state where the suit is brought, and the defendant a citizen of another state. The Circuit Courts of the United States, although not inferior courts, are courts of limited jurisdiction. It has been uniformly held that the record of a judgment of a Circuit Court must affirmatively show the existence of the jurisdictional fact, and that, unless the contrary appears by the record, the presumption is that the case was without its jurisdiction, and it is further held that the question may be raised for the first time on error, and if on examination it is found that the record is silent as to the jurisdictional fact, the judgment will be reversed. (Stanley v. Prest., etc., 4 Dallas, 8; Robertson v. Cease,
These views lead to an affirmance of the judgment.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *550