53 N.Y. 536 | NY | 1873
Section eleven of the Code, subdivision four, gives an appeal to this court in an order affecting a substantial right not involving any question of discretion arising upon any interlocutory proceeding, or upon any question of practice, in the action. Section 122 provides to some extent a substitute for the former bill of interpleader in equity in certain cases. It authorizes the court in its discretion, upon the application of a defendant sued upon contract, or for specific real or personal property, and upon his depositing in court the amount of the debt, or delivering the property or its value to such person as the court may direct, to substitute as defendant any person, not a party to the action, who claims the same debt or property, and to discharge the defendant making the application from liability to either party. But the granting or refusing the application is, by the terms of the section, in the discretion of the court, and is therefore excluded from the class of orders which are appealable to this *539 court by subdivision four of section eleven. The only remedy strictly of right to a party sued by one of several claimants of the same debt or duty, and who, claiming no title or interest therein himself, knows not to which of the claimants he ought of right to render the debt or duty, but is ready to render it to the rightful party, is by action, in the nature of a bill of interpleader, and in such action a judgment of interpleader will be given upon proper terms at the final hearing, and such judgment terminates the action. (Atkins v. Manks, 1 Cow., 691; Bedell v. Hoffman, 2 Paige, 200.)
If this case was strictly within section 122 (supra), and an application of the insurance company to be discharged as defendant, and from liability on the payment of the money demanded into court, and the substitution of the adverse claimants as defendants had been denied, the exercise of the discretion by the court below would not have been reviewable here. (Schaettler v. Gardiner,
All the proceedings in an action are under the control and subject to the direction of the court, so long as the action is pending. (3 P. Wms., 242.) No fixed legal right exists to retain an order, or even a judgment in an action, and either may be vacated and set aside in the exercise of that discretion which exists in all courts of record. (Foote v. Lathrop, *540
The only question that remains is, whether the court had power to relieve the parties from the stipulation and consent that the order be entered; for if the power existed, it was discretionary in the court to grant the relief asked; and the order granted in the exercise of such discretion is not appealable to this court. It is not an unusual thing to relieve parties from stipulations made in the progress of the action; and courts have always regarded this as within their power, and the exercise of it is frequently necessary to promote justice and prevent wrong.
In Malin v. Kinney (1 Caines, 117), a party was relieved from a stipulation that two causes should abide the event of two others, after the latter had been tried. A like agreement made in open court was set aside and vacated, in The Hiram (1 Wheat., 440). Ch. J. MARSHALL says: "If a judgment be confessed under a clear mistake, a court of law will set that judgment aside, if application be made while the judgment is in its power." See alsoBuck v. Farralt (3 P. Wms., 242). Even a release may be set aside on motion for fraud. (Ferris v. Crawford, 2 Denio, 595, per BURROW, Ch. J., p. 604.) Other cases might be referred to, but these suffice to show, upon authority, that the court below had control of the order entered by consent, and power to relieve the parties from their stipulation.
Whether the causes assigned were sufficient to justify the court in the exercise of the power was exclusively for that court to determine; there certainly was not an entire absence of a foundation for the application. It is true, as urged by the appellants, that the stipulation was in the nature of a compact or agreement of the parties, and valid per se; but, like other compacts and agreements made in the progress of an action and affecting proceedings in it, it was liable to be dealt with summarily by the court, so long as the parties could be restored to the same condition in which they would have been if no agreement had been made. The Baltimore suit *541 was not the result of the stipulation; and unless barred by the order which was vacated is not necessarily affected by it, certainly not upon the theory of the plaintiffs in that action. They contend that the action of the present plaintiff is upon one set of policies, and their action in Baltimore upon another; that the causes of action are distinct, and the actions are not for the same debt, and that, therefore, there is no case for an interpleader. Whether this be so will be for the courts to determine when the question is presented for decision. It is not before us. The insurance company have lost nothing, and no rights have been imperiled by the entry of the order and its subsequent vacation. The remedy by a suit of interpleader is still open to it, and it can lose nothing; for if it is compelled to resort to an action and has judgment of interpleader, it will have its costs from the fund. There is a question whether the order was fully warranted by the stipulation, but that will not be considered; and as we are satisfied that the appeal must be dismissed, the questions upon the merits will not be examined.
The appeal must be dismissed.
All concur.
Appeal dismissed.