152 N.Y.S. 365 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
It appears that on January fourteenth this case was marked ready for trial in Part III of the court and was sent from there to a vacant part for trial. The trial then proceeded and one of the defendants was examined on behalf of the plaintiffs. During the examination a somewhat heated discussion occurred between the court and defendants’ counsel. As a result of that discussion, and apparently in order to avoid any possible prejudice to the defendants from the remarks of the court to the defendants’ counsel, the court very properly declared a mistrial. Thereafter, the defendants’ counsel asked to have the case sent back to the calendar in Part III, but the judge ordered the trial to proceed before him. In order, however, to safeguard the defendants’ rights completely the trial justice sent to other parts of the court for an entirely new jury. Defendants’ counsel then stated, “ Before I examine the jury I have a preliminary motion to make. I am frank to say that what transpired in court has practically taken all the strength out of me. I believe I can’t do justice to my clients — I can’t do justice to my clients in trying the case. My clients will be punished on my account, and I feel I can’t go on trial before your Honor at this time.” The trial justice overruled this objection and
Upon their motion in the court below and upon this appeal the defendants contend that counsel had a right to refuse to go on with the case because, by reason of the discussion before the court directed a mistrial, he had come to believe that his clients’ rights would be prejudiced by the attitude of the trial judge. If the defendants’ claim to a new trial depended upon the validity of this conclusion, I should unhesitatingly vote to affirm the order of the court below.- Attorneys have a duty to their clients to vigilantly protect their rights, but no attorney and no litigant has a right to choose the judge before whom he is willing to litigate his cause. The law guarantees to each litigant a fair trial; every remark of a trial judge in a jury trial, if excepted to, must, under the law, be recorded, and if by reason of such remark there is fair ground for the belief that the litigant’s rights have been prejudiced, either the trial court or the appellate court will set aside the judgment. In this case, although the trial justice had himself called the original trial a mistrial in order to prevent the possibility of prejudice arising from his remarks to counsel in the presence of the jury, yet counsel presumed to refuse to proceed before the same justice and a new jury upon the alleged ground that he feared that his clients’ rights, and even his own rights, might be severely prejudiced. The attorney is an officer of the court, and as such has a duty to per
There is no doubt, however, that the relationship of attorney and client may be terminated at any time by either party. When, therefore, before the trial begins the attorney insists upon withdrawing from the .case,
The order denying the motion to open the default is therefore reversed, without costs, and the motion is granted, provided that the defendants within ten days •secure an order of substitution and pay to plaintiffs the sum of thirty dollars costs and any disbursements incurred on the appeal; the plaintiffs to be permitted to retain the moneys heretofore" paid as security for any judgment that they may obtain; otherwise order is affirmed, with ten dollars costs:
Hendrick and Cohalan, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, without costs, provided that defendants, within ten days, secure an order of substitution, etc., otherwise order affirmed, with ten dollars costs.