195 A.D. 733 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The proceeding was begun by an order made in Bangs county on the 8th of March, 1920, appointing Frank S. Gannon, Jr., commissioner. Gannon, before filing his oath, issued a precept to the sheriff of Richmond county to summon a jury. The case came on for hearing on the sixth of April. Before any proceedings were had on the hearing, Gannon called in a notary and took the statutory oath. It appears, however, that the oath was not filed until September twenty-fourth, after the hearings were ended. The committee, Annie Lynam, applied for permission to sell real property in Richmond county. She found a purchaser, and a contract was agreed upon, but objection to the title was taken because the commissioner had omitted to file his oath until after the hearings and the granting of the order declaring incompetency. In this situation the committee of the incompetent made a motion to be permitted to file the oath nunc pro tunc. The motion was denied on the authority of Matter of Bischoff (80 App. Div. 326).
The statute (Code Civ. Proc. § 2329) provides that each commissioner, before entering upon the execution of his duties, must .subscribe and take, and file with the clerk, an oath, faithfully, honestly and impartially to discharge the trust committed to him.
In the Bischoff case three commissioners were appointed. They did not take the oath until after the precept to the sheriff to summon a jury had been issued. Thereafter two of the commissioners took the oath while the third never took it and did not serve. .It was held that the proceedings were without jurisdiction and void because of the failure to comply with the statutory requirements. In the opinion the greatest weight is given to the fact that the statute requires
The question before us is whether the oath should be filed nunc pro tunc. If the proceedings are void there is no use in directing the oath to be filed. I would say on general principles that where the statute requires an officer to take and file an oath before he performs his duties, and he takes the oath, the filing is a mere ministerial act, and if omitted it may be done nunc pro tunc. The officer has taken the oath required by law. What he does is done under sanction of the oath, and the omission of the mere physical, ministerial act of filing is, it seems to me, an irregularity that can be thereafter corrected. It is true that he issued the precept to the sheriff before he took the oath; but this also is a ministerial act which does not require the exercise of any judicial discretion. If the jury are regularly brought in, even without the precept, I think the proceedings would not be void. Neither do I think it would be proper to hold the proceedings void because the precept was issued to the sheriff before the oath was made. The point is that the commissioner took the oath before he entered upon the discharge of the duties that required the exercise of judicial powers.
The claim is made that the proceedings were begun in Kings county and that the oath itself was taken in Richmond county. The statute provides that the petition shall be presented to a Special Term held in or to a justice at chambers within the judicial district where the alleged incompetent resides (Code Civ. Proc. § 2323); but it is not irregular that the jury should be summoned, the hearings had and the oath filed in the county where the alleged incompetent resides or where the land affected is located although the petition may have been presented in another county within that district;
The order should be reversed, without costs, and the motion to file the oath as of the date when it was taken granted.
Jenks, P. J., Rich, Putnam and Kelly, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, without costs, and motion to file the oath as of the date when it was taken granted.