4 N.Y. 575 | NY | 1856
Lead Opinion
When the child was born the mother wa in very feeble health, and the father was unable to support it; on these accounts she was placed with her father’s father before she was a year old; there she has continued to live until she has attained the age of nine years, and, as might
It is specially important that the court should always be open to hear such matters, and accordingly this was one of the. matters which were .heard -by the chancellor at chambers, even in contested cases. The. same power, with the same .right and obligation to; exercise it at all times, has devolved on the supreme court, and may be exercised by
The judgment should be affirmed, as well on the merits as on the question of regularity.
Dissenting Opinion
On the petition of the respondent for the custody of her infant daughter, a justice of the supreme court, at chambers,- adjudged that she was entitled to its custody, and ordered that the appellant (its grandfather and guardian) forthwith deliver it to the mother. On appeal to the general term the order or decree was affirmed. The disposition of the custody of the child, in respect to its interest, and on the merits, I am inclined to think was
It is conceded that the late court of chancery of this state' had the power, on petition, to entertain a proceeding and make precisely such an order as is now the subject of review; and by the constitution of 1846, and the judiciary act of 1847, the power is vested in the supreme court of the state. (Const., art. 6, § 3; Laws of 1847, 323, § 16.) The office of chancellor was abolished, and the same powers and jurisdiction as were possessed and exercised by the court of chancery conferred on the supreme court. There is no doubt, therefore, that the present supreme court, as a court, is clothed with this branch of equity jurisdiction. There are thirty-two justices, any one of whom may hold the court, and at a regular term thereof take cognizance of either legal or equitable proceedings. But the old court of chancery has not given place to thirty-two distinct equity courts, with a like number of chancellors. The chancellor’s court was always open, not only for the issuing and return of process, but for other purposes. The power to appoint stated and special terms was lodged with the chancellor, and he might alter them at pleasure.' The only statutory restriction on the power was that at least two stated terms should be held in the city of Albany, and two in the city of New-York, in every year. (2 R. S., 176, § 48.) If it be true that the present supreme court is always open, and a judge thereof may exercise his judicial functions and powers at times and places other than those fixed by law, in cases not expressly sanctioned by the legislature; if he may hold a court of equity at any time and in any place, and make orders and decrees in equitable proceedings; then was this proceeding
I am of the opinion, however, that the order was without authority, and for the reasons that I shall proceed briefly-to state. -Though the present supreme court possesses the powers of the old court of chancery, and the justices of that court have the power of the late chancellor, that power must be exercised at a regularly appointed term of the supreme court, unless in cases where the legislature has authorized an act to be done by a judge out of -court. This at least, has been the -generally received opinion heretofore of-the judges of-that court. All suits.and proceedings in .equity are to be first heard and determined, and orders and decrees made at a special term -of the supreme court. (Judiciary act, Laws of 1847, 325, § 20.) In the first judicial district, but in none other, a motion which is defined to be an application for an order, may be made to a judge or justice out of court. (Code, § 401.) A motion to change the venue cannot be made at chambers, except in the first district. (Schenck v. McKie, 4 How. Pr. R., 248.) An order of a judge made at chambers, staying proceedings beyond the time limited by statute, is an excess of power beyond the statutory limitation, and void. The supreme court, unlike the late court of chancery, is not always open, except fo.r -the issuing and return of process. (Laws of 1847, 335, § 57.) It is not open for general purposes. The places for holding the circuits and special terms of the supreme court, •are those designated -by the statute for holding county and circuit courts. (Code, § 24.) The times are fixed by the judges of each district pursuant to law. The times and places in the respective districts are to be biennially designated. (Code, § 22.) All courts must be held at the places fixed by law, and at the times appointed by the judges, or in case of extraordinary terms, by the governor. (Code, §§ 22, 23.) They cannot be opened or held at any other
The order should be reversed.
A. S. Johnson, Selden, Comstock, and Hubbard, Js., concurred in the opinion of Mitchell, J.
.T. A. Johnson, J., concurred in the foregoing opinion by Wright, J.
Denio, C. J., took no part in the decision.
Order affirmed.