5 Denio 66 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
No judge can sit in any cause in which he is a party, or interested, or in which he would be excluded from serving as a juror on the ground of affinity or consanguinity to either of the parties. (2 R. B. 275, § 2.)
The important question, however, is whether the relationship appears in such a manner as to be regarded by the court. For the defendant in error it is urged, that as there was no evidence or admission respecting it, on the trial, and as it was not there made the subject of an objection, or even spoken of, nothing could properly be stated respecting it in the return. The return, however, need not be confined to what took place at the trial. Whatever the justice was bound to return is proved by the statements of that document. As the fact of consanguinity was set forth in the affidavit, the justice was bound to answer respecting it, unless it was impertinent and foreign to the commencement, existence or progress of the action. This cannot be affirmed. It lay at the foundation of the whole proceeding. It referred to the jurisdiction of the court—the vital principle of the suit. Suppose the affidavit had stated that the justice had become a tavern-keeper since his election, or had tried the cause on Sunday, or in a neighboring county, would not his return on either of these points have brought the matter directly before the court, though he should add that the fact was neither admitted or proved on the trial? Had.the justice been asked on the trial whether he was related to the defendant, it would have been his duty to answer truly, and he is equally bound to do so when the inquiry is made for the first time in the affidavit. The objection was not waived by the omission to notice it at the trial. In this respect it is unlike a similar objection to a juror; here it affects the jurisdiction, but in the other case it concerns only the proceedings after jurisdiction has been acquired. The question of jurisdiction may be raised at any lime.
It is said, on behalf of the defendant in error, that the question of relationship can only be raised by the assignment of error in fact; that nothing on the subject having appeared on the trial, the defendant below against whom it is now set up
Judgment reversed.