113 N.Y.S. 793 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1908
This is a motion made by the attorney for the plaintiff to adjudge one Benjamin "Koronsky, a defendant in this action, guilty as of a contempt of court and to fine the said Koronsky the sum of $1,759.46 as damages actually sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the alleged deceit practiced upon the court by the said Koronsky m procuring certain process of the court to the injury and damage of the plaintiff in the amount hereinbefore mentioned.
This action was brought by the plaintiff, against the defendant Benjamin Koronsky and another to recover the sum of $974.40 arising upon a claim upon a note made by the said defendants’ firm, said note having been given for merchandise sold to the defendants’ firm by the plaintiff in this action. The summons and complaint was served upon the defendant Benjamin Koronsky, and he making.default in appearance and answer, as alleged by the plaintiff, judgment was duly entered for the amount claimed, with costs. Immediately thereafter a motion was made on the part of the defendants to vacate the judgment entered upon the al
The facts in this case present clearly and forcefully the damage and harm which may well arise from perjury committed in regard to the service of process, and which unfortunately is so prevalent in all the courts of our city, and for the eradication of this evil only drastic measures can obtain the relief desired. The referee took 555 pages of testimony. There were twelve full hearings. The referee took twelve days in reading the minutes and preparing his report, and the referee’s fees, which were paid, amounted to $500. The stenographer’s bill amounted to $420, so that ' the actual expenses and disbursements in the proceeding to establish the fact of service amounted to $920, which, together with $10 motion costs, amounted to $930; and I am constrained to say that, notwithstanding the seemingly large amount of the expense, from the amount of testimony presented, labor performed, I am of the opinion that that charge is not excessive. In addition to this amount, the attorney for the plaintiff asks that he be allowed $750' for services rendered in and upon the reference and proceedings incident thereto, and that the further sum of $-260 for services rendered upon thiis motion to punish the defendant for contempt of court he allowed him; and neither can I say that this request is exorbitant, for the motion papers before me
The defendant who is called upon to pay this expense still malees the claim that he never was served with the summons and complaint in this action; but with the finding of the referee and the confirmation of his report by a justice of this court, and no appeal having been taken from the order of confirmation, and the time having elapsed within which he could do so, I am estopped from any consideration of that question whatsoever, and must therefore, for the purposes of this motion, assume that the defendant Koronsky was served with the summons and complaint, and that when he swore that he was not served with them he testified falsely and acted deceitfully to the court; and I have no hesitancy in saying that the record of the proceedings before me convinces me that he was served with the papers and that he is still unrepentant and untruthful to the last. The moving papers show that he has, since this proceeding was instituted, disposed of his property to his son in an attempt to evade the rigor of the law. He maintains, however, that he should -not be fined, because in moving to set aside the judgment he was exercising a legal right; but I know of no law nor a principle of law which permits a man to attempt to assert a legal right by the exercise of a manifest wrong. There was. no misunderstanding in this
Under section 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure a court of record has power to punish by fine and imprisonment a party to the action or special proceeding for any deceit or abuse of a mandate or proceeding of the court. So that the question to be decided upon this motion is whether or not the defendant Koronsky, having presented his affidavits stating that he was not served with the summons and complaint, and others in corroboration of that statement, and upon such presentation having obtained an order of this court to show cause why the judgment should not be vacated and set aside, and having obtained a stay of all proceedings pending the hearing of that motion, and staying proceedings on the part of the sheriff until the hearing of the motion, and having obtained on such false affidavits an order of reference of this court to take testimony, whether such facts, being untrue, constitute a deceit to the court or of the court. In the case of Fromme v. Gray, 14 Misc. Rep. 592, affd. 148 N. Y. 695, on the opinion of the court below, the court said: “ The statute stigmatizes 1 any deceit7 as a contempt — deceit in what % Manifestly deceit upon the court in procuring its mandate or process.77 There is a dearth of judicial expression as to the meaning of the word “ deceit,77 as applied to the language of section 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure and the only expression on the subject is the case hereinbefore referred to. From the finding of the referee it is evident that the defendant Koronsky swore falsely in stating that he was not served with the summons and complaint,
It is now high time for the court in unmistakable language to denounce conduct such as that of which the defendant stands proven guilty. It is not enough to say that • one guilty of such conduct may be punished by prosecution at the hands of the criminal authorities. There are penalties more severe to a man of the character of the defendant than
The motion to punish for contempt is granted. The defendant is fined the sum of $-1,759.46, to be paid within ten days after the entry of an order hereon and service of a copy of the order hereon upon him. In default of such payment let a commitment to the county j ail be issued.
Ordered accordingly.