192 F. 942 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1911
It now appears that the plaintiff took no, appeal from the defendant’s assessment for 1898, as required by section 3226, U. S. Rev. Stat. (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2088), without which the action could not be maintained. The defendant, in his motion to vacate the judgment in this case, contends that he was misled into making the stipulation by a statement in one of the letters of plaintiff’s attorney, dated December 18, 1909, that the three cases were “governed by precisely the same state of facts as the case already tried.” This statement was true as to the cause of action, which was what the writer was considering, but was not true in respect to the 'procedure. After this, however, the negotiations continued to March 5, 1910, before the stipulation was agreed upon, and if the defendant had looked at his pleadings he would have seen that the complaint alleged, and his answer denied, that such an appeal had been taken. I think the parties were dealing at arm’s length, and see no ground for the defendant’s saying that he was misled into making the stipulation.
I think it should be taken to have waived this purely technical objection, and therefore the motion is denied.