154 N.Y. 342 | NY | 1897
The petitioner, W. Hampton Warde, began his law clerkship on the 25th day of April, 1895. He now asks to be admitted to an examination upon producing a regents' certificate under the rules of 1892.
On the 22d day of October, 1894, rules of this court were adopted, to take effect on the first day of January, 1895, providing *343 that "applicants for examination shall be deemed to have studied law within the meaning of these rules only when they have complied with the following terms and conditions, viz.: 3. Applicants who are not graduates or members of the bar as above prescribed shall, before entering upon the clerkship or attendance at a law school herein prescribed, or within one year thereafter, have passed an examination conducted under the authority and in accordance with the ordinances and rules of the university of the state of New York, in English composition, advanced English, first year Latin, arithmetic, algebra, geometry, United States and English history, civics and economics, or in their substantial equivalents as defined by the rules of the university." (Rule 5.)
It was further provided that "a law student whose clerkship or attendance at a law school has already begun, as shown by the record of the Court of Appeals, or of any incorporated law school, or law school established in connection with any college or university, may, at his option, file or produce instead of the certificates required by these rules, those required by the rules of the Court of Appeals, adopted October 28, 1892." (Rule 6, subdivision 7.)
The course of study prescribed by the rules of 1894 was materially enlarged and embraced studies not included in the rules of 1892. The new rules applied to all students except those whose clerkship, or attendance at a law school, had theretofore begun. It consequently follows that all students whose clerkships or attendance at a law school commenced after the first day of January, 1895, were required to conform to the rules then in force.
On the 2d day of December, 1895, the rules of this court were again amended, to take effect on the first day of January, 1896. Numerous amendments were incorporated into the rules, but the provisions which we have quoted from the rules of 1895 remained unchanged, except that the word "proofs" was substituted for "certificates." It is now claimed that subdivision seven of rule six was, in effect, readopted in the new rules, to take effect on the 1st day of January, 1896, and *344 that the effect is to give the students the right of option to qualify under the rules of 1892. Such was not our intention, and we do not understand it to be the legal effect of the amendments. The amendments of the rules of the court are analogous to the amendments of the statutes and should receive the same construction.
In the case of Ely v. Holton (
The petitioner having commenced his law clerkship after the rules of 1895 were in force, must conform to the requirements of those rules as to the production of a regents' certificate.
This motion must, therefore, be denied.
All concur.
Motion denied. *345