12 N.Y.S. 143 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The defendant incurred the penalties to the amount of the verdict. The point which he raised by his answer and motions for the dismissal of the complaint is that this suit against him in the name of the peo
It is urged that this is not a question of the capacity of the people of the state to sue, but one of authority. But the people of the state are, in this respect, unlike an individual or domestic corporation. An individual not laboring under disability has a capacity to sue in whatever action he chooses to bring in his own name, however unsound his cause of action may be. So of a domestic corporation. But the people have no such general capacity. They have no capacity to sue for penalties except as authorized by law, and not then, except through the officer or person authorized to bring the suit. If the proper agency is absent, the capacity is absent. In fact the people, as a body aggregate, under a constituted government, are practically iii ward, the public officers being their guardians. The people, strictly speaking, have no capacity to use their own name. The proper officers use it as the law permits. Hence the name of the people as party plaintiff in an action brought by an unauthorized attorney simply as “plaintiff’s attorney” is the name of a party without capacity to sue in that suit, and without capacity to sue for the penalties therein specified, except upon the condition precedent lying at the foundation of its capacity, namely, that it shall be brought into court by the proper agent of the law. But, whether the defect is one of capacity or of authority, this action, if either defect exists, is not maintainable. If without authority, the action rests upon usurpation, and the defendant is punished in the name of the people, when they have not moved against him. The penalties in question were incurred under sections 23, 24, c. 534, Laws 1879. Section 23 was amended by chapter 127, Laws 1884, and section 24 by chapter 11, Laws 1886. Section 33 of the act of 1879provided that “all penalties imposed by this act may be recovered, with costs of suit, by any person in his own name;” and the district attorney was also authorized to bring actions for their recovery in the name of the people. We have examined all the statutes subsequently enacted to which we have been cited, especially chapter 591, Laws 1880, and chapter 317, Laws 1883, the provisions of which, relative to