225 A.D. 85 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1928
Lead Opinion
Plaintiff's intestate was struck by an automobile owned and operated by the defendant corporation, and was killed. Under the provisions of section 282-b of the Highway Law the defendant, appellant, filed the statutory bond for the payment of any judgment recovered against it to the extent of $2,500 for death or personal injuries sustained by a plaintiff. The defendant, appellant, belonged to an organization known as the Cabco Owners Association, Inc. Such association obtained indemnity bonds, pursuant to the provisions of section 282-b of the Highway Law for its members through the Equitable "Surety Company of New York. In return for dues paid, the defendant and other members of the Cabco Owners Association, Inc., were represented in the defense of negligence claims by said association and a subsidiary and
The affidavits show that an oral agreement was entered into between the attorneys representing the plaintiff and Shapiro whereby the Cabco Agency, Inc., acting for defendant, agreed to settle the plaintiff’s claim for $2,000. That such agreement was entered into is not disputed. Subsequently, Shapiro sought to repudiate such settlement, claiming that he was induced to agree thereto upon representations made by the attorneys for the plaintiff that the plaintiff and her children were dependent for support upon the deceased who had been killed, and it is claimed that the countersignature of the appointee of the surety company was withheld because, upon investigation, it was discovered that at and for some time prior to his death plaintiff’s intestate had neither lived with nor contributed to the support of his children. The plaintiff’s attorney and representative denies the making of any such representation. Shapiro admitted that at the time of making the settlement he was in possession of the facts in regard to the alleged misrepresentation, upon the report of his investigator, but Shapiro claims to have overlooked if in settling the action. It seems to me that the representation, if made, was quite immaterial, and that it was a matter of no consequence whatever as to whether or not the deceased had been accustomed to support his wife and family, and the fact that he had not, in nowise detracted from plaintiff's right to recover. It was certainly the legal duty and obligation of the decedent to support his wife and family.
The questions presented upon this appeal are, first, as to whether the agreement of settlement entered into between the admitted
The appellant also raised the objection to the enforcement of the settlement upon the ground that it was oral and not in writing, as required by rule four of the Rules of Civil Practice. I think rule four has no application to the circumstances presented here. If a settlement was made as is admitted, then there was no necessity for a formal written agreement between the parties. There can be no question, after reading the affidavit of Shapiro himself in opposition to the motion below, that he made the settlement with the plaintiff in the sum of $2,000. I do not think the plaintiff should be made the victim of a fraud through an oral stipulation which was acted upon by all of the parties. The defendant, making the same through its agent, should not be permitted to retract or take advantage of rule four. Here we have the terms of the agreement of settlement admitted by all parties. The only question presented is that of the authority of the agent to make the settlement. Therefore, it would not seem to be of any importance whether the agreement, which was admittedly made, was in writing or not. (Lee v. Rudd, 120 Misc. 407.) The authority of Shapiro to act for the Cabco Agency, Inc., was fully established before the referee.
The judgment appealed from and the order brought up for review should be affirmed, with costs.
Dowling, P. J., and McAvoy, J., concur; Finch and Proskauer, JJ., dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The Special Term has directed judgment on motion, predicating its action upon an oral agreement of settlement alleged to have been made out of court between the plaintiff’s attorney and the representative of a mutual insurance corporation which insured the defendant corporation, one of its members, against liability for claims based upon negligence. The defendant refused to carry out the settlement for the assigned reasons that the person claiming to act on its behalf was not authorized so to do, and also upon the ground that the settlement was induced by a misrepresentation of fact. It may well be that in a plenary action upon the agreement of settlement both these claims may be resolved against the defendant; but that question is not before us. I think the court has no power upon motion to determine either of these questions or to order a judgment upon the basis of a disputed oral agreement claimed to have been made out of court.
I, therefore, dissent from the affirmance of the judgment and order.
Finch, J., concurs.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.