The*sole question presented on this appeal is this, whether it Was competent and right for. Mr. Smith to act as surrogate in the . proceeding in the Surrogate’s Court to obtain a sale of the tes*546tator’s real estate to pay bis debts, f.uch proceeding being based on a judgment which lie had procured as attorney and counsel; whether he was not, for the reason stated,- disqualified from entertaining- the proceeding or acting as surrogate in the matter of tho application. . lie was not disqualified on the ground of pecuniary interest, as it appears that on the 17th of May,- 1872, several years before tho proceeding before him was instituted, the plaintiff in tho judgment (present respondent) settled with him'and paid him in full for his services as attorney and counsel • in ■ tho case, and tho relation of attorney and client, before existing between them, then ceased. This conclusion, that Mr. Smith had no pecuniary interest in the matter after such settlement and payment, renders mauy. of the cases cited by tho counsel for the appellants inapplicable to this case. But it is insisted that he could not bo discharged from bias and partiality by any arrangement or action between himself and his client, as regards tho matters involved in tho judgment - which he, as attorney and counsel, had been instrumental in procuring; hence that he was in law disqiialifiedifom acting as judge in any proceeding wherein tho claim on which the judgment was rendered, or even tho judgment itself, could bo brought in question. It is a sound principle, recognized in all enlightened countries, that all officers clothed with judicial authority should, with a view to their just and upright action, be free from all influences which might, by possibility, induce bias in tho exercise of their duties; and so tenacious are wise and just governments in this regard, that in most countries laws are enacted expressly prohibiting magistrates, having judicial power, from sitting in judgment in cases and uuder circumstances where they might be touched by sinister impulses. So in our own State it -is enacted that the sittings of courts shall be public, and that every citizen may attend them; that no judge can sit as such in any cause to which he is a party, or in which he is interested, or in which he would be excluded from being a juror by reason of consanguinity or affinity to either party, and also for various other causes specified in tho statutes. (2 R. S., 275, marginal paging.) The provision more directly applicable to tho case in hand is as follows: “ No judge of any court shall have a voice in tho decision of any cause in which he has been counsel *547or attorney, or solicitor, or in the subject-matter of which be is interested.” (Laws of 1847, ck. 280, § 81.) It is not. disputed tliat the surrogate is a judicial officer. His functions are in general judicial. So it cannot be well disputed that he acted judicially in the proceedings here under review; and it may be well to inquire to what extent he acted, judicially in this case; just what he was called upon to adjudicate; what he was judicially to determine. He was to determine by adjudication (in this case where the application was by a creditor) whether there had been an accounting by the executor, and whether there were or wore not sufficient assets to pay the debts of the deceased. These were material averments to be made and proved, and they were in fact made in the petition of the creditor. The appellants in this case, being interested in the premises proposed to bo sold, had a right to contest these averments. They might insist that there had been no accounting, or that the pretended accounting was irregular and void., or collusive and fraudulent. So, too, they might attack the claims of creditors with a view of showing that there were, in fact, sufficient assets to pay all just debts. against the deceased. It was held in Baker v. Kingsland (10 Paige, 366), that, before a surrogate was authorized to make an order for the sale of the real property of a deceased person, he must bo satisfied on legal proof, that the debts for the purpose of satisfying which the application is made, arc justly due and owing from such deceased person, as against the owners of the real estate. The respondents then (and here is the material point in this case) might attack the petitioner's judgment, and also the claim for ■which the recovery was had. The judgment was not conclusive on the owners of the real estate proposed to be sold. (Osgood v. Manhatten Co., 3 Cow., 612; Baker v. Kingsland, 10 Paige, 366 ; Sharpe v. Freeman, 45 N. Y., 802.) The statute applicable to this proceeding is as follows: that “ where a judgment has been recovered or decree obtained against an executor or administrator for any debt, due from the deceased, and there are not sufficient assets in the hands of such executor or administrator to satisfy the same, the debt for which the judgment or decree was obtained shall, notwithstanding the form of such judgment or decree, remain a debt against the estate of the deceased to the *548same extent as before, and to be established in the same manner ■ as if no such- judgment or decree had been obtained ; provided • that, where such judgment or decree has been obtained upon a trial ' or hearing upon the merits, the same shall be prima facie evidence of such debt before the surrogate.” (Laws of 1843', ch. 172 ; 3 : R. S’., 6th ed., 117, § 60 ; see, also, cases above cited remarking ' on this statute.) Nor is this statute repealed by section 1210 of ' the present Code of Procedure, which was intended to supercede : section 8 as incorporated into the Revised Statutes. (3 R. S., 618, § 8, 6th ed.) It is not repealed in terms or by direct reference ; and it will not be deemed repealed by implication when both may stand and have due effect. The petitioner’s claim against' the estate, therefore, was to bo determined on adjudication by the surrogate in the proceeding before him, and - to be established in the same manner as if no judgment thereon had been obtained, except that in its establishment the statute made the judgment prima facie evidence of its integrity. Still the integrity of the claim was to be determined by the adjudication of the surrogate, as was also that of the judgment when offered in evidence to prove its rightfulness. Now, the surrogate had been the attorney and counsel of the creditor in prosecuting the claim to judgment. He had been employed to advise as to its justice and legality. As attorney and counsel, he had labored to establish it in cory.-t; and now, in the proceeding before him, he was called upon to decide the same case as judge. Could he fi;ee himself from a very natural bias in favor of the justice of the claim; a bias engendered by his former position as counsel and attorney in the case? This cannot, be presumed; the contrary is amecessary legal inference. Very plainly his case came within tl).e spirit of the statute, which declares that “ no judge of any court shall have a voice in the decision of any cause in which he has been counsel, or attorney, or solicitor; ” and this provision is here given emphasis by its substantial repetition in the statute, which declares that “ whenever any surrogate of any county shall be precluded from acting as such in any case by reason of * * * having acted as counsel in any cause, and there shall be like disability attaching to the local officer (if there be one) authorized to discharge! the duties of surrogate, and also to the county judge, then *549. the district attorney of such county shall possess the powers and exercise the .jurisdiction in all respects iu such case as the surro- .■ gate of such county would be authorized to possess and exer- ; cise, were it not for such disability.”' (Laws of 1847, chap. 470, § 32; 3 Ii. S., 86, § 78, 6th. ed.) This statute contemplates ,. a disability of the sun’ogate in a' “ case” before him, because of ; his having acted as counsel in a “ cause.” 'So here the surrogate , :had a case before him for adjudication, as to which he had acted , as counsel and attorney in’ a cause. As counsel and attorney, he had advised that The claim of the creditor was just and legal. ; The question came before him again as judge in a case requiring vits adjudication. He then had a “case” before him as to which -ho had acted as counsel in a “ cause.” But in a just and liberal ■sense,'the cause before the surrogate for his adjudication was a -cause in court as to which he had acted as counsel and attorney. 'The question in the Supreme Court was the same in the Surro- • gate’s Court, to wit: Was the creditor’s claim a just and legal one -against the estate of the deceased? The question was open to adjudication, alike in both courts. In a fair sense, therefore, the .surrogate was called upon to act as judge in a cause as to which -he had acted. as counsel and attorney. The case in hand falls Avithin both the spirit and the letter of the larv, in its just import, which declares that “ no judge of any court shall have a voice in the decision of any cause in Avhich he has been counsel or attorney ,or solicitor.”
But Avcre there no statute in express terms disqualifying a judicial officer from adjudicating -upon a matter as to which he had acted as counsel, Ave should be inclined to hold such action improper, and good ground for alleging error. Such action is repugnant to one’s sense of justice and right, and brings the administration of the law into disrepute by throAving strong suspicion upon the officer’s impartiality. This doctrine is recognized in many cases. (McLaren v. Charrier, 5 Paige, 530; Ten Eick v. Simpson, 11 id., 177; Whicher v. Whicher, 11 N. H., 348; The People v. Suf. C. P., 18 Wend., 550; Oakley v. Aspinwall, 3 N. Y., 549, 550; Moses v. Julian, 45 N. H., 52, 58.) To adopt the language of Judge BeonsoN in one of .the cases cited,“next in importance to the duty of rendering a righteous judg- *550■ meat is that of doing it in such a maunsi as will beget no suspicion of the fairness or integrity of the judge.” In another of the cases cited, the court remarked that if a judge has acted as attorney, counsel, law advisor or advocate, in relation to the business in hand, that furnishes just cause of exception without reference .to the time when such aid or counsel was given. And Judge UuRlbux remarked, in Oakley v. Aspinwall (supra), that “the first idea in the administration of justice is that a judge must ■.necessarily be free from all bias and partiality. He cannot be both judge and party, arbiter and advocate in'the same cause. ••Mankind are so agreed in this principle, that any departure from it : shocks their common sense and sentiment of justice.” Now, prior to ¡May 17, 1872, it was admitted that the surrogate had a pecuniary interest in the judgment. To that time, then, he had the bias of ’ attorney and counsel in favor of its maintenance; also a bias growing out of pecuniary interest. He might and did relieve himself :.from the bias of direct pecuniary interest, by accepting payment in .satisfaction of his claim. . But the bias of his position as attorney ■ and counsel remained. There was an honorable and honest obii■gation still resting upon him to support a result he had secured to ,;his client, for which' lie had accepted compensation. Recognizing this obligation, can it be maintained, in theory at least, that he-■stood an impartial judge without bias between parties, one of •whom was his former client, where the question of the justice of the claim, as to which he had advised, and the integrity óf the judgment based thereon, which he Had procured, should come in question? We are of the opinion that the surrogate was disqualified from entertaining the application for a sale of the decedent’s real estate in. this case; hence the decree appealed from must be. reversed. The proceedings before the surrogate should also be dismissed, as it would be unavailing to send back the case for further or other .action before that officer.
,, The reversal of. the decree and dismissal of the proceedings should be, as wo think, without costs. It does not appear bid that the creditor and surrogate acted in the utmost good faith'. The record discloses nothing personally reprehensible on the part of either. It seems hard to punish the creditor with the payment of costs, when It is quite manifest that he must bé a considerable *551loser on his claim. Besides, while the reversal of the decree is necessary for the vindication of a principle of the greatest importance in the administration of justice, still, in this case, it is perhaps proper and right to make the reversal without costs. •
Decree appealed from reversed, and proceedings dismissed without costs.
Learned, P. J., and Boaedman, J., concurred.Decree reversed, without costs, and proceeding dismissed.