PRINTED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE, ALBANY: CHARLES VAN BENTHUYSEN, PRINTER TO THE LEGISLATURE, 407 Broadway. AN ACT To amend the act entitled "An act to Simplify and Abridge the Practice, Pleadings, and Proceedings of the Courts of this State," passed April 12, 1848. Passed April 11, 1849. The act entitled "An act to simplify and abridge the practice, pleadings, and proceedings of the courts of this State," passed April 12, 1848, is hereby amended so as to read as follows: AN ACT To Simplify and Abridge the Practice, Pleadings, and proceedings of the Courts of this State. WHEREAS, it is expedient, that the present forms of actions and pleadings in cases at common law should be abolished, that the distinction between legal and equitable remedies should no longer continue, and that an uniform course of proceeding, in all cases, should be established: Therefore, The People of the State of New-York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows: GENERAL DEFINITIONS AND DIVISIONS. 6. Definition of a civil action. 7. Civil and criminal remedies, not merged in each other. 8. Subjects embraced in this act. Division of remedies. Definition of all action. a of a special Division of actions into civil and of a crimi of a civil aetion. Civil and criminal Section 1. Remedies in the courts of justice are divided into, 1. Actions; § 2. An action is an ordinary proceeding in a court of justice, by which a party prosecutes another party for the enforcement or protection of a right, the redress or pre vention of a wrong, or the punishment of a public offence. Definition § 3. Every other remedy is a special proceeding. proceeding § 4. Actions are of two kinds : 1. Civil; criminal 2. Criminal. Definition $ 5. A criminal action is prosecuted by the people of nal action, the state, as a party, against a person charged with a pub lic offence, for the punishment thereof. Definition § 6. Every other is a civil action. § 7. Where the violation of a right, admits of both a Semedies civil and criminat.fereds; the right to prosecute the one is not merged in the other $ 8. This act is divided into foi o parts: The first relates to the courts of justice, and their jurisdiction; The second relates to civil actions commenced in the courts of this state, after the first day of July, 1848, except when otherwise provided therein, and is distributed into fifteen titles. The first four relate to actions in all the courts of the state, and the others, to actions in the supreme court, in the county courts, in the superior court of the city of New-York, in the court of common pleas for the city and county of New-York, in the mayors' courts of cities, and in the recorders' courts of cities, and to appeals to the court of appeals, to the supreme court, to the county courts, and to the superior court of the city of New-York. not in each other. Subjects embraced in tus act. |