Anonymous
Anonymous
Opinion
Absent: Booth, Chief Justice; and Way, Associate Justice of the Court of Common Pleas; and Batson, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. Mr. Justice Booth was detained at home by sickness. There was not a quorum to hear any cause but an appeal from Chancery; and in none of those cases were all the counsel employed in attendance.
Mr. Chief Justice Johns suggested to the members of the Court, and particularly to the Justices of the Court of Common Pleas, whether they would proceed to hear any Chancery case in the absence of Mr. Chief Justice Booth. The Chancellor had nothing to say on the subject, but he felt no doubt about the propriety of hearing those cases, because the constitution [Art. 7, s. 1] has declared that “any four of the Judges of this Court may proceed on business;” and nowhere is the absence of the Chancellor, or of either or both of the Chief Justices made a cause to suspend the business, provided there be a quorum. Indeed the 7th article of the constitution contemplates the absence of both of the Chief Justices, and yet that the business shall be proceeded in; and thus is no exception of Chancery cases. On an appeal from the decree of the Chancellor on a bill filed by John Vandyke and others against Mr. Chief Justice Johns, the Court did hear the appeal, in the absence of Mr. Chief Justice Booth, and, of course, when Mr. Chief Justice Johns was not on the bench, as he was a party, and dismissed the appeal.
The Court met this morning between nine and ten o’clock. The members were present as yesterday with Judge Batson.
The Court then proceeded to the case of John Holland’s Executrix v. Mary Holland, which is an appeal from the Chancery; and as the counsel on both sides consented to the hearing in the absence of Mr. Chief Justice Booth, the Court went on with the cause; and as the Chancellor was very unwell he went home. The decree of the Chancellor was affirmed.
There was not a quorum to hear any writ of error directed to the Justices of the Supreme Court, because of the absence of Mr. Chief Justice Booth, and the non-attendance of Mr. Justice Way.
This day the Court met. Present: Johns, Davis, and Batson, Justices of the Supreme Court; and Cooper and Stout, Justices of the Court of Common Pleas. The Chancellor did not attend, because he was so much indisposed that he apprehended that by sitting in court his health might be so seriously affected that he should not be able to do business at any future day of the term, but that by indulging, and nursing himself
The Chancellor went to town this morning about 9 o’clock, and was there informed by Mr. Sipple that the Court had adjourned to the [-]
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.