Judges: McAdam
Filed Date: 11/15/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
It might be deemed presumptuous for a court, at Trial Term, to inquire into whether the Court of Appeals possessed the jurisdiction it assumed in a given case were it not for the fact that “ It is no new feature in the law that inferior magistrates may, when thereunto called, sit in judgment upon the jurisdiction of the highest courts, when their process or judgments come collaterally before them.” People ex rel. Tweed v. Liscomb, 60 N. Y. 568. In this instance it becomes necessary to pass upon the validity of a judgment rendered by the Court of Appeals which is attacked for want of jurisdiction. When there is no jurisdiction the proceeding is as nothing. Perkin v. Proctor, 2 Wils. 382, 384, citing Marshalsea case, 10 Coke, 76a, 76b. Judgments without jurisdiction are not voidable, but void (Black Judg., §§ 171, 218; Clarion, etc., R. Co. v. Hamilton, 127 Penn. St. 3), and, being nullities, may be attacked directly or collaterally. Risley v. Phenix Bank, 83 N. Y. 318; Everett v. Everett, 22 App. Div. 473. These principles are elementary, for manifestly a void thing is no thing. It appears that on April 12, 1898, the plaintiff recovered judgment for personal injuries, caused by negligence, against the Third Avenue Railroad, for $2,792.21, damages and costs. The defendant appealed from said judgment to the Appellate Division, and on the appeal the defendant executed an undertaking in which it agreed that if said judgment was affirmed the defendant would pay the amount thereof with all costs. On January 30, 1899, the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed said judgment, with $130.85 costs. 36 App. Div. 191. On February seventeenth following, an application for reargument or for a certificate permitting the railroad company to appeal to the Court of Appeals was made to the Appellate Division and denied. In the following month Chief Judge Parker of the Court of Appeals signed an order allowing an appeal to that court- for the purpose, as the order recited, of reviewing one specific question as to which it was claimed the trial judge had committed error. The cause was heard in the Court of Appeals, and the judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered for an error of law, respecting questions other than the one specified in said order. 162 N. Y. 193. The plaintiff contends that such a reversal and direction were unauthorized; hence the judgment was null and void, both as to the parties and their sureties. Acting upon this theory, the plaintiff brought the pres
Judgment for defendant.