5 Johns. 282 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1810
There is a point of very great importance, arising on the pleadings in this cause, which was not argued or decided in the case of Mr. Tates, on the habeas corpus ; that is, whether the chancellor, while acting officially and judicially, is responsible, in this action, for what he has done as chancellor.
I consider the point as of so much importance that I shall not express my judgment on the demurrer, without bestowing some further consideration
Cur. adv. vult.
The opinion of the court was now delivered by
The record before the court presents the case of a civil suit, brought against the chancellor of this state, for an act done by him in his judicial capacity, while sitting in the court of chancery. The pleadings admit that the defendant did, as chancellor, and not otherwise, at a court of chancery, held on the 15th of September, 1808, order the plaintiff, after he had been discharged upon habeas corpus, by one of the judges of this court, to be recommitted for the contempt and malpractice for which he had been originally imprisoned, and that the action is brought for such reimprisonment, and to recover the penalty mentioned in the 5th section of the habeas corpus act.
The counsel who appeared for the plaintiff at the last term, (and who was the same counsel that argued the case upon the habeas corpus at the last February term,) declined to argue this case, but would not consent that judgment should pass against the plaintiff by default, and pressed the court for a decision during the term, and accompanied his motion with an intimation that he intended to carry the cause, by writ of error, into the court for the correction of errors, This fact must be my
The words of the statute upon which the suit is brought, are, “ that no person who shall be set at large upon any habeas corpus, shall be again imprisoned tor the same offence, unless by the legal order or process of the court wherein he is. bo.und by recognisance to appear, or other court having jurisdiction of the cause; and if any person shall knowingly, contrary to this act, recommit or imprison, or cause to be recommitted or imprisoned for the same offence, any person so set at large, he shall forfeit to the party grieved, 1,250. dollars."’ There appears to be several strong reasons why this section in the statute cannot support the action.
The order of the court of chancery was legal, inas-r much as. the previous discharge of the plaintiff was not in a case authorized by the statute, and was null and void in law. This was the decision of the court at the last August term,
Rut the point which I purpose now principally to com sider is, whether there be any foundation in law for the Suit, admitting that the defendant was mistaken in supr posing that the discharge of the plaintiff under the habeas Corpus, was unduly made. The statute allows the party so discharged, to be again imprisoned for the same of-fence, provided it be by the legal order or process of the court wherein he is bound by recognisance to apr pear, or other court having jurisdiction of the causes
Our system of appellate jurisprudence is built upon a sounder foundation, and instead of entrusting to the fiat of a single judge, to correct the errors of any court of justice, it has provided the constitutional process by appeal, or a writ of error. It is sufficient that,.the which commits, has jurisdiction of th^eauWw^MSIi' ment; and as the cause in the present case was an alleged malpractice and contempt, the court of chancery most undoubtedly had jurisdiction over the subject matter. It is decisive on the point, that the court considered the act of which it complained, to be a contempt and malpractice, by being an unauthorized interference with the practice of the court. Every court judges exclusively for itself, of its own contempts; no other court, and much less a single judge out of court, can undertake to judge on the question. The plaintiff was recommitted, to use the language of the order, for “ contempt and malpractice and whether the court of chancery was right or wrong in considering that the plaintiff’s conduct amounted to a contempt, and whether it took the proper steps to ascertain the contempt, is perfectly immaterial as to the point of jurisdiction. It had authority to punish contempts. It must judge what are con-
On the ground which the court took, then, it certainly had jurisdiction of the subject matter. The case of Howell, the recorder of London, is to this purpose. He presided at a court of oyer and terminer, and fined and imprisoned a juror, for bringing in a wrong verdict. In a suit against him for this act, the whole court of C. B. declared that the oyer and terminer had jurisdiction of the cause, because it had power to punish a misdemeanor in a juror; though in the case before the court, the recorder had made an erroneous judgment in considering the act of the juror as amounting to a misdemeanor, when in fact it was no misdemeanor. (Hamond v. Howell, 2 Mod. 218.)
To be prepared to give a sound construction to the statute giving the penalty in question, we ought to bear in mind the uniform and solemn language of the common law, as to the responsibility of judges, by private suit, for their judicial decisions. “ We shall never know,” says Lord Coke, “ the true reason of the interpretation of the statutes, if we know not what the law was before the making of them.” Where courts of special and limited jurisdiction exceed their powers, the whole proceeding is coram non judice, and all concerned in such void proceedings are held to be liable in trespass. (Case of the Marshalsea, 10 Co. 68. Terry v. Huntington, Hardres, 480.) But I believe this doctrine has never been carried so far as to justify a suit against the members of the superior courts of general jurisdiction, for any act done by them in a judicial capacity. There is no such case or decision which I have met with, and I find the doctrine to be decidedly otherwise. In Miller v. Seeve, (2 Black. Rep. 1141.) Lord Ch. J. De Grey said,
The doctrine which holds a judge exempt from a civil Suit or indictment, for any act done, or omitted to be done by him, sitting' as judge, has a deep root in the common law. It is to be found in the earliest judicial records, and it has been steadily maintained by an undisturbed current of decisions in the English courts,, amidst every change of policy, and through every revolution of their government. A short view of the cases will teach us to admire the wisdom of our forefathers,- and to revere a principle on which rests the independence of the administration of justice. Juvat accedere fontes atque haurire.
Serjeant Hawkins (b. 1. c. 7. p. 6.) lays down this general rule, as the result of his inquiries on the subject; “ That the law has freed the judges of all courts of record from all prosecutions whatsoever, except in the parliament, for any thing done by them openly in such courts as judges. For,” he adds, “the authority of government cannot be maintained, unless the greatest credit be given to those who are so highly entrusted with the administration of public justice, and that if they should be exposed to the prosecution of those whose partiality to their own causes would induce them
We meet with the principle here stated as early as the Book of Assise, 27 Ed. III. pl. 18. The case there was, that A. was indicted, for that being a judge of oyer and. ' terminer, certain persons were indicted before him of trespass, and he had entered upon the record that they were indicted of felony, and judgment was demanded, if he should answer for falsifying the record, since he was a judge by commission ; and all the judges were of opinion that the presentment was void. And at this same early period we find this wise protection extended equally to grand jurors. In 21 Ed. III. Hil. pl. 16. a writ of conspiracy was sued in K. B. and the question was, whether it be a good plea to the action, that the 'defendants wel-e indictors in the case complained of, and it was held to be a good plea. In 9 Hen. VI. 60. pl. 9. an action upon the case was brought against A. for fraud, in executing the office of escheator, and Babington, J. said, and so it was agreed, that such a suit would not lie against a judge of record. So in 9 Ed. IV. 3. pl. 10. it was held by Littleton, J. and not denied, that an action of assault and battery would not lie against a justice of the peace, for what he did as a judge of record ; and the same principle was afterwards more solemnly advanced by all the judges, in 21 Ed. IV. 67. pl. 49. They all concurred in opinion, that for what a justice of the peace did in the sessions, he was not amenable.
These cases, and many more opinions of the like effect, which could be gleaned from the Year Books, conclusively show, that judges of all courts of record, from the highest to the lowest, and even jurors, who are judges of fact, were always exempted from prosecution, by action or indictment, for what they did in their judi
The case of Groenvelt v. Burnwell, (12 Mod. 386. 1 Salk. 396. 1 Ld. Raym. 454.) arose long after the passing of the habeas corpus act, and the unanimous opinion of the court of K. B. was given by Sir John Holt, whose name has always been held in reverence by English freemen; for he was a sound judge and an in
I shall close this review of the cases with noticing, one arising in an American court. The case I allude to is that of Phelps v. Sill, lately decided in the supreme court of Connecticut. (1 Day’s Cases in Error, 315.) From the characters composing that court, I think the decision entitled to great consideration. That was a suit against a judge of probates for omitting to take security from a guardian, and the court held that the action would not-lie. They said that “ it was a settled principle, that a judge is not to be questioned in a civil suit for doing, or for neglecting or refusing to do a particular official act, in the exercise of judicial power. That a regard to this maxim was essentia,! to the ad
After this recognition of the principle, I may confidently appeal to every sound Mid intelligent lawyer, whether it could possibly have been the meaning of the habeas corpus act, to make the chancellor, or any other judge of any other court of record, responsible in a civil suit, for a heavy penalty, for an action done of record by him, while sitting in his court of justice ? Ought such a sacred principle of the common law, as the one we have been considering, to be subverted, without an express declaration to that effect l Does such a construction appear ever to have. been entertained in any book, or by any individual, from the time of the statute of Charles II. until the bringing of the present suit ? Our act is but a transcript from the English statute, and Serjeant Hawkins (b. 2. c. 15. § 24.) expressly excludes every such construction. “ The habeas corpus act,” he observes, “ makes the judges liable to an action at the suit of the party, in one case only, viz. in refusing to award a habeas corpus, and seems to leave it to their discretion in all other cases, to pursue the directions of the act, in the same manner as they ought to execute all, other laws, without making them subject to the action of the party, or to any other express penalty or forfeiture.” The penalty to which the chancellor and ' judges are liable, is mentioned in the fourth section of the act} andthat is given against them by name, and only for.
Judicial exercise of power is imposed upon the courts. They must decide and act according to their judgment, and therefore the law will protect them. The chancellor, in the case of the plaintiff, was bound in duty to imprison and reimprison him, if he considered his conduct, as amounting to a contempt of his court. The obligations of his office left him no volition. He was as much bound to punish a contempt committed in his court, as he was bound in any other case to exercise his power. He may possibly have erred in judgment, in calling an act a contempt which did not amount to one,. ,and in regarding a discharge as null, when it was binding. This court may have erred in the same way ; still it was but error of judgment, for which neither the chancellor, nor the judges of this court, are or can be responsible in a civil suit. Such responsibility would
No man can foresee the disastrous consequences of a precedent in favour of such a suit. Whenever we subject the established courts of the land to the degradation of private prosecution, we subdue their independence, and destroy their authority. Instead of being venerable before the public, they become contemptible; and we thereby embolden the licentious to trample upon every thing sacred in society, and to overturn those institutions which have hitherto been deemed the best guardians of civil liberty.
I am, therefore, of opinion that judgment ought to be entered for the defendant.
Thompson, J. and Van Ness, J. concurred.
Yates, J. was absent,
The decision of the court, at the last August term, in the matter of John V. N. Tates, entitles the defendant to judgment on the demurrer. A .majority of this court held that the recommitment of the plaintiff, after he had been set at large on habeas corpus, was a legal and justifiable act.
I have not thought it necessary to examine the other point in the cause, with a view to deliver an
Judgment for the defendant.
4 Johns. Rep. 317.