Summary
In People ex rel. Corwin v. Walter (68 N.Y. 403) Judge ALLEN, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: "The writ lies only to inferior courts and officers exercising judicial powers affecting the property or rights of the citizen, and is directed to the court, magistrate or board, exercising such powers, requiring them to send into the Supreme Court from which the writ issues, the proceedings in a cause or matter already terminated."
Summary of this case from Matter of LeverantOpinion
Argued January 19, 1877
Decided February 13, 1877
A. Perry for the appellants. William S. Farnell for the respondents.
There is an embarrassment in determining what judgment should be given in, or disposition made of, these appeals, not by reason of any intrinsic difficulty in the questions connected with the merits of the transactions sought to be reviewed when presented in proper form, but growing out of the questionable shape in which the action of the officers named is presented for review, and also the fact which is prominent upon the record that the judgments from which these appeals are brought are, and any judgments we might give would be, utterly fruitless and incapable of execution. The bonds of the several towns interested had been issued and delivered in exchange for the stock of the railroad corporation many months before the initiation of these proceedings, so far as they affect the assessors, a former writ of certiorari having been quashed, and at least one installment of interest had been levied upon the towns, and paid to the holders of the bonds. These bonds cannot be recalled and restitution made, or the parties restored to their former condition by any judgment or order in these proceedings, and neither the towns nor the bondholders will be bound or estopped by the judgments of this or any other court in these proceedings. A judgment of any court, whatever its jurisdiction, is only evidence against parties to the record, or those in privity with them. The records would not be competent evidence in an action upon the bonds, and if our judgment should be adverse to the validity of the proceedings under the statutes authorizing the issue of bonds, the bondholders might laugh at our decision, knowing that it could not affect them, and if we should affirm the action of the assessors, the town authorities might snap their fingers, and in an action upon the bonds make every defence which legal skill should suggest, without the slightest impediment from our opinions or judgments. It is a fundamental principle, that a party cannot be deprived of his property or civil rights, except by due process of law, or affected by judgments in actions and proceedings to which he is not a party, and in which he has not had his day in court. We recently dismissed an appeal from the judgment of the Supreme Court upon a certiorari in a smilar proceeding, for the reason that the court would not do a vain thing or give a judgment which would be ineffectual for any purpose. ( People v. Phillips, 67 N Y, 582.) The rights of parties having interests to litigate cannot be foreclosed or embarrassed by a contest between strangers. We were of opinion that the Supreme Court should have quashed the certiorari, but as the judgment in affirmance of the action of the assessors would not estop the town or embarrass a defence to an action on the bonds, we did not disturb it. We were also of opinion that the title of the commissioners to their office could not be determined upon a certiorari directed to them.
These proceedings were commenced and continued with a remarkable disregard of the proper functions of a common-law certiorari, and as a proceeding directly against the commissioners to remove them from office, it has been substituted for an action in the nature of a quo warranto, and the judicial action of the county judge in appointing them to office has been reversed upon a certiorari not addressed to him, but to the officers appointed by him, and without a return by the magistrate of the record before him, or the facts upon which he entertained jurisdiction. The attempt to reverse the judicial action of the assessors by a certiorari addressed to the county clerk with whom was deposited the record of their acts, was an anomaly in legal proceedings, but it was sought to be corrected afterwards by an ancillary writ directed to the assessors.
A common-law certiorari is in the nature of an appeal from the judgments and judicial determination of inferior tribunals, and officers acting under statutory authority or when the proceeding is not according to the common law. The writ lies only to inferior courts and officers exercising judicial powers affecting the property or rights of the citizen, and is directed to the court, magistrate, or board, exercising such powers, requiring them to send into the Supreme Court from which the writ issues, the proceedings in a cause or matter already terminated. ( Stone v. Mayor, etc., of New York, 25 Wend., 157; People v. Same, 2 Hill, 9; Lynde v. Noble, 20 J.R., 80; Lawton v. Comr. of Highways, 2 Caines R., 182; Starr v. Trustees of Rochester, 6 Wend., 564; Ex parte Mayor of Albany, 23 id., 277.)
The three writs of certiorari issued at different times, but in the same proceeding, and all consolidated, were addressed to three different classes of officers, only one of which, viz., the assessors, exercised any judicial functions. These different officers had no joint or common duties devolved upon them, but each acted independent of the other, and two several judgments have been given, one removing the commissioners from office, and the other reversing the action of the assessors. The proceedings were multifarious and bad for that reason, bringing together incongruous and independent matters for the judgment of the court. In Starr v. Rochester ( supra) the writ, intended to bring up for review the proceedings in laying out a street, was directed not only to the trustees of the corporation, but also to the assessors and the president of the board, and it was held multifarious. A certiorari, as an independent proceeding to bring up the action of the county judge in the appointment of the commissioners, should have been addressed to that officer, and not to the commissioners. A return by the latter brought up nothing for review any more than would a return to a certiorari directed to a constable having an execution upon a judgment of a justice of the peace bring up the judgment for review, and affirmance or reversal, as the facts which the constable might return should seem to require. ( Starr v. Rochester, and Ex parte Mayor of Albany, supra.) In Bryant v. Mayor, etc., of New York (7 Cow., 158) the writ was directed to the corporation of the city to bring up the proceedings for laying out a street, and it was sought to review the action of the judge, acting as a commissioner, in appointing the commissioners of estimates and assessment, and it was held they were not before the court for review, but that a writ to bring up those proceedings should be directed to the judge who made the appointment. This would dispose of the proceedings against the commissioners, and lead to a reversal of that part of the judgment which removes them from office. But, in The People v. The Supervisors of Queens (1 Hill, 195), we have a direct authority that a certiorari does not lie to a ministerial officer for the purpose of examining process under which he is acting, nor to inquire into the title by which he holds office. Again, the duties of the commissioners were strictly ministerial and not subject of review by certiorari. The judgment of the Supreme Court removing them from office necessarily, if sustained, carried their proceedings with it. It is well settled that a certiorari does not lie to a ministerial officer, and the fact that a public agent exercises judgment and discretion in the performance of his duties does not make his action or powers judicial in their character. The superintendent of the new capitol exercises judgment in the making of contracts, and in performing his many duties, but he does not exercise judicial powers. ( People v. Mayor of New York, 2 Hill, 9; Same v. Same, id., 14, n. a.)
The People v. Morgan ( 55 N.Y., 587) is relied upon to sustain the judgment against the commissioners as well as that reversing the proceedings of the assessors. But in the case cited the commissioners were not parties to the proceedings, and their title to office was not passed upon, and they had taken no action and performed no duties. They were named in the writ, but merely to restrain them from acting while the proceedings were pending, and the proceedings of the assessors were reversed, they being judicial in their nature, for want of jurisdiction, or rather by reason of a failure to show jurisdiction under the peculiar statutes from which alone they derived authority. (Laws of 1869, chap. 241, § 1.) There was no judgment affecting the title of the commissioners to the office, or touching their action as commissioners. The court below were misled as to the scope of the writ in that case, and the judgment actually given by the appearance of the names of the commissioners in the proceedings without a statement of the manner in and purposes for which they were named. They were not called upon to, and did not, make a return to the writ, but were merely enjoined from action. The court had not jurisdiction over the title of the commissioners to office, and the judgment removing them from office is void for want of jurisdiction, and should be reversed.
The judgment, so far as it professes to set aside and annul the action of the commissioners in subscribing for the stock of the railroad corporation, and issuing the bonds of the town therefor, is without precedent and inconsistent with the proper officers of the common-law certiorari. The proceedings of the commissioners were purely ministerial, requiring, it may be, the exercise of discretion and judgment, but the duties were in no respect judicial, and did not call for the exercise of judicial discretion and determination. The judgment is a nullity. It purports to set aside and avoid the contracts and dealings of the commissioners and the railroad company, and nullify the bonds of the towns without the presence of the town or the railroad corporation as parties to the proceedings, and to annul securities issued to third persons, who have not been heard or had a day in court. The judgment, to this extent, is a mere brutem fulmen, and is deceptive and therefore mischievous. It cannot but encourage litigation by a judgment which binds nobody, and which may prove fallacious. With proper parties before the court, the case might assume a very different shape, as well upon the facts as the law applicable to the facts.
The judgment reversing the action of the assessors stands upon a different footing from that against the commissioners, and the jurisdiction would have been the proper subject of inquiry upon a return to a writ of certiorari, brought before their action had been consummated, and put beyond their recall or the powers of the court, directed to them, and which was not vitiated by being united with other writs in the same proceeding directed to other officers. In The People v. Morgan ( supra) we reversed the action of the assessors for want of jurisdiction in them to act. The jurisdiction of inferior magistrates and officers exercising judicial powers is always open to review upon a writ of certiorari, and in that case no action had been taken, based upon the determination of the assessors, and a reversal of their action affected no rights other than those before the court, and full effect would be given to the judgment and the town effectually protected from the issue of bonds as none had been issued or could thereafter be issued. Whether, under the statutes, if the assessors had jurisdiction, the court could inquire into the facts and review their determination may be questionable, but it is not necessary to consider it. If The People v. Phillips ( supra) was rightly decided and the decision is to be followed, the appeal from the judgment reversing the action of the assessors should be dismissed. We are not called upon, and ought not, to determine questions which are speculative, and pronounce judgments which can only gratify curiosity as to our opinions upon cases propounded where the judgment can have no practical effect in determining any pending litigation, or any controversy that may arise in the future, and where our decision and judgment will be entirely extra-judicial and entitled to no respect as authority.
The court below should have dismissed the certiorari, but as no harm can arise from permitting the formal judgment to stand and dismissing the appeal, it should be so ordered.
The judgments on the writs directed to the commissioners should be reversed and the appeals from the other judgments should be dismissed.
All concur.
Judgments and orders accordingly.