Farley v. De Waters , 2 Daly 192 ( 1867 )


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  • Brady, J.

    The act to simplify and abridge the practice, pleadings, and proceedings of the courts of this State, passed April 12,1848 (Laws 1848, p. 497, § 58), declared that the Marine *193Court, of the city of Mew York, should have jurisdiction in the cases specifically designated, and no other. It conferred jurisdiction in actions by or against any person belonging to, or on board of, a vessel in the merchant service, for an assault and battery, or false imprisonment, committed on board such vessel, upon the high seas, or in a place without the United States, of which the ordinary courts of law of this State had jurisdiction, though the damages exceeded one hundred dollars. The jurisdiction was, therefore, limited to assaults and batteries and false imprisonment, committed on board of a vessel, by a person belonging to, or on board of, such vessel. The section referred to was not changed by the amendments to the Code of 1852 (Laws 1852, p. 651); but, by an act passed in the session of that year (Laws, p. 647, sec. 9), the jurisdiction was extended to two hundred and fifty dollars, in all cases in which it was then limited to one hundred dollars. By the act in relation to the Marine Court, of the city of Mew York, passed July 21, 1853 (Laws, p. 1165), it is provided that the Marine Court, of the city of Mew York, shall have jurisdiction over, and cognizance of, actions of assault and battery, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, libel, and slander, where the damages claimed do not exceed five hundred dollars, and that the costs, in all such actions, when prosecuted in any other court in the city of Mew York, should be limited to the amount which would have been recovered in said Marine Court, if prosecuted therein, but in no such action should the costs exceed the damages recovered. The same act provided for an appeal to the general term of the Marine Court, which the justices were empowered to hold. It is manifest that the legislature intended to enlarge the jurisdic tion of the Marine Court, in actions of assault and battery, whether committed on board a vessel on the high seas, or otherwise. The limited jurisdiction of that court was merged in the larger and more general jurisdiction given by the act of 1853. The legislature not only gave a general jurisdiction of actions of assault and battery, but in actions of slander, malicious prosecution, and libel, of which that court had no previous jurisdiction. Such was not only the intention, but it was designed to relieve the other courts having cognizance of such actions, *194where the damages claimed did not exceed five hundred dollars, hy limiting the costs to be awarded in such actions to the sum which could be recovered as costs in the Marine Court. If the construction adopted by J udge Cardozo be correct, then, for an assault and battery committed on board a vessel lying at the port of Mew York, the Marine Court can give no redress to the injured person. I think such is not the law, either in terms, spirit, or intention. The statute of 1853 is sufficiently comprehensive to include all actions of assault and battery of which the ordinary courts had jurisdiction, provided only, however, that the damages claimed do not exceed five hundred dollars. The act of 1853 necessarily repeals the act of 1848, inasmuch as by the latter act the Marine Court had jurisdiction only of cases where the assault and battery was committed on board a vessel on the high se.as, or without the United States, and, by the former act, the jurisdiction of those actions is conferred without any condition or limit, except as to the amount of damages. So far, therefore, as the act of 1848 limits the action to the conditions therein expressed, it is repealed, and, being thus repealed, as it is not in conflict with the act of 1853, and not necessary to perpetuate its object when passed, or to make the latter effective, it must be regarded as repealed for all purposes. I think the judgment should be affirmed, agreeing, as I do, with Judge Cardozo, in the other conclusions to which he has arrived.

    Daly, F. J. Before the passage of the act of July 21, 1853, the jurisdiction of the Marine Court, in actions of assault and battery, was limited to a certain class of cases; but that act declares that the court shall have jurisdiction over and cognizance of actions of assault and battery, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, libel, .and slander—jurisdiction in the three last actions, malicious prosecution, libel, and slander, being by that act conferred upon the court for the first time. The only limitation to the jurisdiction thus generally conferred in the five actions named is, that the damages claimed should not exceed five hundred dollars; and that it was the design of the legislature, that the court should have unlimited jurisdiction *195in such actions when the damages claimed did not exceed five hundred dollars, is apparent from the subsequent provision, that the costs in all such actions, if prosecuted in any other court in this city, shall be limited to the amount which would have been recovered in the Marine Court, if the action had been prosecuted therein; and that in no such action should the costs exceed the damages recovered. The plain object of this latter provision in respect to costs, is to take away any inducement to bring such actions in the .higher courts in this city, except where the plaintiff expects to recover a larger amount of damages than five hundred dollars ; for if the recovery is less than that amount, he gets only such costs as are allowed in the Marine Court, and in no event c,an the costs exceed in amount the damages recovered.

    An act which, in general terms, gives a court jurisdiction and cognizance of actions of assault and battery, and false imprisonment, with no limitation except as to the amount of damages which may be claimed, must be regarded as repealing, by implication, a previous enactment by which it could exercise only a qualified jurisdiction in such actions. By the subsequent act, that which was before limited is made general, or rather limited only to the extent expressed in the subsequent enactment.

    The case to which Judge Cardozo refers, the original report of which is in Dyer, 131 b, is in no way in conflict with this view of the effect of the subsequent statute. To understand the precise bearing of that decision, it is necessary to look at the original report as well as into the other Doctor Foster's Case (in the 11 of Coke, 63), where the reason for the decision is given, vand to examine the three statutes, 33 H. 8, c. 23; 35 H. 8, c. 2; and 1 & 2 of Philip & Mary, c. 10, which came under consideration in the decision.

    Before the passage of the 33 of H. 8, c. 23, persons guilty of treason had, by the common law, to be indicted within the shire or place where they committed the offense, and to be tried by the inhabitants or freeholders of that place, which appears by the preamble of the statute itself (1 Rastell’s Statutes, 757); and that statute was passed, where the treason was confessed,. *196upon examination before any three of the king’s council, or when any three of the council should “ vehemently suspect” that the offense had been committed, to empower the crown to issue a commission under the great seal, for the trial of the accused before commissioners in any shire or place which the king might appoint. The statute of 1 Philip & Mary, c. 10, declared that all trials for treason should be according to the course of the common law, and Coke declares that this, by implication, repealed the former statute. The statute of 35 H. 8, c. 2, was passed to empower the judges of the Court of King’s Bench, or a special commission, to try cases of treason committed out of the realm of England, the same as if the offense had been committed therein—the preamble of the act reciting that it was doubted whether, by the common law, certain kinds of treason, misprisions, and concealments of treason, perpetrated out of the realm of England, could be inquired of or tried therein (1 Rastell, 839); and it was held, in the anonymous case in Dyer, the treason having been committed in France, that this statute was not repealed by the 1 of Philip & Mary, c. 10, declaring that treasons thereafter should be tried according to the course of the common law, because treason committed out of the realm of England was not, according to the course of the common law, an offense triable in England, for treason, by the common law, had to be tried in the county or shire where the offense was committed. The right to try a man m England for treason committed beyond the sea, was derived solely from the statute of 35 H. 8, c. 2, which provided for the place, for the tribunal, and for the manner in which such an offense should be tried, and which could not be repealed by a statute providing for the trial of treason thereafter according to the course of the common law—the offense for which the previous statute had made provision being one unknown to the common law, and consequently one which could not be tried according to the course of it (Dyer, 131 b; Doctor Foster’s Case, 11 Co. 63; Staunforde’s Pleas of the Crown, 89, 90; Hale P. C. part 1, c. 25). This exposition of the case in Dyer shows that it has no bearing upon the point under consideration. I agree with Judge Brady, that the judgment should be affirmed.

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 2 Daly 192

Judges: Brady, Cardozo

Filed Date: 6/15/1867

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/5/2022