Lead Opinion
By the Court.
The rule of law that an appearance by a responsible attorney without collusion, is binding upon the person for whom he appears, and that for any injury resulting to him therefrom, such person muff pursue the attorney, has not been enforced rigorously in this State. The defendant has generally been permitted to come in and defend. Such was the order made in Denton v. Noyes (6 Johns. R., 296); in which the cases illustrative of the rule mentioned are collected and commented upon; also in the cases of Grazebrook v. McCreedie (9 Wend., 437); and Sterne v. Bentley (3 How. Pr. Rep., 331); in which the defendants were copartners, and one of them had employed an attorney to act for both, without the knowledge of his associate ;—also in the case of Blodget v. Conklin (9 How. Pr. Rep., 442), in which the defendants were joint debtors, and had both been served with process, hut in which one of the defendants, without the authority of the other, employed an attorney who appeared for both.
These cases are precedents for affording the relief granted by the judge at Special Term, and making it apparent that the order appealed from should he affirmed. I think, however, that the rule itself is unjust. . It has been, in effect, repudiated in Allen v. Stone (10 Barb., 547). It was said by Kent, Ch. J., in Denton v. Noyes (supra), in reference to it that “ the cases may not seem correct if we were to reason from first principles.” It is asailed in Williams v. Van Valkenburg (16 How. Pr. Rep.,
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the conclusion that under the eircumsiapce.- of this case, the order appealed from is right, .and should he affirmed. "
Dalt, F. -T.—I agree that the order should be affirmed.
Order affirmed, with costs.