23 Misc. 608 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1898
It appears from the record that one William Engel, the owner of certain property, entered into ia contract with the defendants Hopkins and Roberts, under which the latter agreed to do certain work towards the erection of a building upon said premises, and they in turn contracted with the plaintiff in this action to do the plumbing and gasfitting work. Liens were subsequently filed by Hopkins and Roberts and by the plaintiff in this action respectively, and thereafter the former instituted an action for the foreclosure of their lien against Engel, making the plaintiff a party defendant. Such proceedings were thereupon had that after a trial of that action judgment was rendered against the owner, under which both of the liens were fully established, and the usual directions given for the sale of the property and the payment of such liens out of the proceeds. Before the commencement of such 'action the lien of the plaintiff herein was discharged, pursuant to the statute, upon the execution and delivery of a bond to the clerk of the city 'and county of Hew York by Hopkins and Roberts, as prin
We are thus left to consider only two questions which the record presents for discussion: (1.) Whether the undertaking on. appeal ‘in the foreclosure proceedings operated as ;a stay of any proceedings for the enforcement of the bond; (2) the construction to be given to the condition of the bond. . At the outset it is necessary to call attention to the fact that the bond in this case was not given by the owner, Engel,- but by the principal contractor. ; This
While suggesting the force of this contention, we do not propose to pass upon it in view .of the fact that in the case before us the lien was discharged and the bond given not by the owner but by the con
The contention that there has been no breach of the condition of the bond, because, by reason of Ithe appeal, the; judgment lacks the attribute of finality, and that this action has, therefore; been
It is plain, therefore, that a judgment does not lose its character or abate in any of its essential attributes, because it has been ap- . pealed from, so long as it is unreversed: so that, in the case at bar, the mere fact that an appeal had been taken did not diminish or suspend the obligation which the defendants entered into to pay the judgment. which had been rendered in plaintiff’s favor. In other words., it was no defense to the action. It is urged that this involves great hardship, and would result in a denial of justice should the judgment be ultimately reversed after a recovery has- been had in this, action. Such is at times the effect of the application of legal principles under the .constraint of formal methods adopted for the orderly administration • of justice. But it may be said that the court is not .entirely without power to deal with such a situation. It was held by the Court of King’s Bench (Cristie v. Richardson, 3 Term Rep. 78), that the court would stay the proceedings in an action! on a judgment pending á writ of error brought to reverse that judgment; and in Suydam v. Hoyt, 1 Dutch. (N. J.), 230, it is said .that the granting of such a stay is in the discretion of the court in which the action is brought. , While in the present case' the action, strictly speaking, is not upon the judgment, the reason for the- rule would -seem to justify its extension to such a case as this. The defendants, however, have not sought such relief, but rest upon the matters alleged as a legal defense to the action. As they do not' constitute such a defense, it follows that the court, erred in dismissing the complaint, and the judgment must, therefore, be reversed.
Judgment reversed and a-new trial ordered, with costs to the .appellant to abide the event.
Gildebsleeve and Giegebioh, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event. .