109 N.Y.S. 165 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
■ This is an appeal from a final order' of the Special Term of the Supreme . Court denying the appellant’s application for. a writ of peremptoi-y mandamus requiring the respondent, as clerk of the Municipal. Court of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, ninth district, to issue a summons to the petitioner upon, the 'payment, of his legal fees therefor. The petitioner is a foreign corporation, and desiring to commence an action against certain defendants, Hublein and-Janorisek, its attorneys prepared a verified complaint, submitted the same to the respondent, as clerk of the Municipal Court, tendered him his legal fees of one dollar, and demanded a summons. The respondent' asked the attorney’s clerk, who applied for the summóns, the residence of the parties, and the clerk being- unable to givé him such information, or to satisfy him as to the residence of the parties, the respondent refused to issue the summons.
The respondent in his answering affidavit states. as follows: ,£ I further say that 1 have been instructed by several justices who have been presiding in the Municipal Court, Borough of Manhattan, Ninth District, not to issue any summons- unless the plaintiff or his representative informs me where the plaintiff or the defendant resides, so -that I may be informed whether the plaintiff or the defendant, or either of them, resides in the district or transacts business or has an agency there.”
The refusal of the clerk to issue the summons prevented the commencement of the action which the plaintiff desired to bring in the Municipal Court for the ninth district in the borough of Manhattan. The act of the clerk in issuing the summons is purely ministerial and not judicial. His refusal to issue the summons unless informed of certain facts from which he could' determine whether the court of which he was the clerk had jurisdiction of the action, could only be based upon the proposition that his function in issuing the summons was judicial; for the determination of whether a given court has jurisdiction in a given action is judicial, and not ministerial. The right to determine such a question has not been conferred upon, and is not possessed by the clerk.
Absolute power to refuse jurisdiction upon a question of residence in. a particular- district is not conferred upon the court. Section 25 of the Municipal Court .-Act (as- amd. by Laws of 1904, chap. 625) provides that “An .action or proceeding of which the Municipal Court has jurisdiction must be brought: 1. In a district in which either the plaintiff or defendant or one of the plaintiffs or-one of the defendants resides, unless all the plaintiffs or all the defendants reside out of the city of Hew York, in which case the action or proceeding may be brought in said court in any district. - * * * 3. By plaintiffs' not residing in the city of Hew York, in the district in which the defendant, or one of the defendants resides, and.against a defendant or defendants, not residing in said city, in the distinct in which the plaintiff or one of the -plaintiffs resides; but where all the parties reside out of said city, the action may be brought in any district. Ho person who shall have a place in said- city for the regular transaction of business shall be. deemed a nonresident under the provisions of this act. 4. If the. district in which the action or proceeding is brought is not the proper district, the action may, /notwithstanding, be tried therein, unless the action is transferred to the proper district before trial upon demand of the defendant made upon or before the joinder-of issue in writing or in open court, followed by the consent
It seems clear from the provisions above cited that if the action is brought in a district which is not the proper one, the action may •nevertheless be tried there unless the defendant upon the joinder of issue demands its removal to the proper- district. If no demand is made the court has jurisdiction to try the action. A privilege is granted to thé-defendant, of which lie may avail'liimself or not, as he will. ' -
In Department of Health v. Halpin (40 Misc. Rep. 243) the Municipal Court had dismissed' the "action, although the defendant did not appear on the return day of the summons or on the trial, upon' the ground that the court did'not have jurisdiction, that section 25 of the' Municipal Court Act was mandatory and that the action must be brought in the district where the violation occurred, notwithstanding the fact that the defendant did not appear and ask to have the case removed to that district. The Appellate Term in this department reversed the court below, stating: “ The exceptions stated' in subdivisions 4 and 5 indicate that the word must ’ in this section is not mandatory, in the sense of taking away jurisdiction from a court other than the one specified therein as the place of trial, but it is used simply for the purpose of giving the defendant who is being sued, in a wrong district, the absolute right of removal if he makes his demand at the proper time and in the proper way. * * * In order, however, to. assert this right, he must appear and make the demand, or if he fails to .appear, his right to removal is lost, and the court where the action is brought has jurisdiction to proceed,” citing Barker v. Archer (49 App. Div. 80), where the ' Appellate Division in the secoiid department said: “ It is conceded the defendant raised no objection to the venue. We are of opinion that the question cannot be raised upon this appeal. The defendant must be deemed to have waived his right in respect to the district in which the action should be tried, by not availing himself of the provisions of the statute;”
It follows, therefore, that the order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the writ issued, with fifty dollars costs to the appellant.
Patterson, P. J., Ingraham, McLaughlin and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with fifty dollars costs.