130 N.Y.S. 1089 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1911
This action was brought to recover royalties alleged to be due from the defendant to the plaintiffs upon the lamps made and sold by the defendant under a license agrees ment. The amount of royalties being predicated upon the manufacture and sale by the defendant, the books of the defendant contained the evidence necessary to prove plaintiffs’ cause of action. An order was granted for the examination before trial of the defendant by ■ Herman J. Jaeger, its then president, and by Edward L. Grans, its then secretary, before a referee on the 2'7th day of June, 1910, and said defendant was further ordered to produce before said referee such of its books and papers covering the period specified in the complaint as contained entries showing the number of incandescent lamps of all classes sold and invoiced ‘by it during said period or any part thereof, such production being for the purpose of aiding the memory and refreshing the recollection of said Jaeger and Crans and not for the purpose of inspection by the plaintiffs or their counsel or for any purpose except the use of said witnesses. This order was personally served upon the defendant company and Herman J. Jaeger. Mr. Jaeger appeared before the referee and submitted to an oral examination. When, how
A motion was made for the punishment of the defendant and Jaeger for their contempt of court. The facts not being sufficiently before the court, a reference was ordered to take proof of the facts with respect to the failure of the defendant to produce such books and papers as ordered by the court, and as to their alleged destruction, and report to the court. The referee has found that the defendant and Herman J. Jaeger, its treasurer, failed and neglected to produce said books and papers as required by the said order; that the said books and papers required to be produced by said order were in the custody and control of the defendant and Herman J. J aeger, its treasurer, shortly prior to the issuance and service of said order; that the defendant and its treasurer, Herman J. J aeger, have not shown by competent common-law proof that the said books and papers have been destroyed, or that they are not under the control of the defendant, and were not in its possession or under its control at the time of the service of said order; that the failure of the defendant and Herman J. Jaeger to comply with said order did defeat, impede, impair and prejudice the rights of the plaintiffs. An examination of the record before the referee shows that these findings are entirely justified by the evidence and that the failure of the defendant and its treasurer, Jaeger, to produce the books and papers in compliance with the order for examination did defeat, impede, impair and prejudice the rights of the plaintiffs and resulted in a substantial miscarriage of justice, and that the defendant and Jaeger are in contempt of court.
The matter now comes on for a hearing upon the referee’s report and upon the original motion. The failure of the
“ The mere statement of this proposition would seem in reason and conscience, to render imperative a negative answer. The fundamental conception of a court of justice is condemnation only after hearing. To say that courts have inherent power to deny all right to defend an action and to render decrees without any hearing whatever is, in the very nature of things, to convert the court exercising such an authority into an instrument of wrong and oppression, and hence to strip it of that attribute of justice upon- which the exercise of judicial power necessarily depends.” P. 414. Since this decision the Appellate Division has, in two cases, felt itself compelled to follow it, as the final expression of the highest court upon a Federal question (Sibley v. Sibley, 76 App. Div. 132; Harney v. Harney, 110 App. Div. 20), while the Court of Appeals does not seem to have so considered it. Devlin v. Hinman, 161 N. Y. 115. We, however, are relieved from all embarrassment by the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas, 212 U. S. 322, in which an order striking out the answer of a corporation for a refusal to produce books and papers on an examination before trial and judgment entered
Herman J. Jaeger will be adjudged guilty of contempt of court and fined in an amount equal to the expenses of the two references, the amount to be determined on the settlement of the order. The defendant will be adjudged guilty of contempt of court and fined $260; and, in addition thereto, because of its failure to produce, when ordered so to do, the books and papers containing material evidence for the plaintiffs, the answer of the defendant will be stricken out, and
Ordered accordingly.