93 N.Y.S. 321 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The plaintiff . appeals from an order setting aside her verdict and granting a motion for a new trial, made on the minutes. Tlie action is for breach.of a contract made by the defendant’s testator. One of the defenses is that the action was not begun within six months after the rejection of the claim presented to the defendant. The question whether the attorneys who presented the claim" in behalf of the plaintiff were authorized to receive the rejection was submitted to the jury. After the verdict, which involved a finding of no authority, the court,.upon the motion for a new¡ trial,-concluded that the question was one of law; that there was & rejection- thereof under section 1822 of the Code of Civil Procedure,, and granted the new trial upon that ground.
The defendant required presentation ¡of 'claims before. May 4, 1903. This claim was prepared by an attorney, Mr. Corwin,- at the instance of the plaintiff. The plaintiff,. received it, signed and .verified it, and sent it back "to him. It was indorsed, New York County Surrogate’s Court—In the Matter of the Estate of Anna E St. John, deceased —4 Original proof of claim of Phebe E. Lockwood —• Harris, Corwin, Gunnison & Meyers, Attorneys for Phebe E- Lockwood, 150 Nassau Street, New York City,” Mr. Corwin was- a member off that firm of attorneys. >The claim was served at
The claim was served pursuant to certain statutory legal procedure. The executor knew that its purpose was to require his decision, which might lead to legal proceedings if the claimant desired its payment. It was entirely natural that the claimant should present her claim by an attorney at law. As it was signed and verified by the claimant and indorsed by a firm of attorneys, the executor had the right to presume that they were her duly authorized attorneys to present the claim to him. In the absence of all evidence to the contrary, I think that the executor liad a right to assume that the authority to present the claim earned the authority to receive the formal disposition thereof which the statute contemplated in answer thereto. It is to be noted that he addressed his rejection to the claimant and merely sent it back through the same channel to the only address written upon the claim. The executor’s action was the next direct step in the very business which had been apparently intrusted to these attorneys, and was directly invited by the action taken by them. In Jenney v. Delesdernier (20 Maine,183, 192) Shepley, J., says: “ The extent of an agency is properly determined when the intentions of the principal and agent are ascertained. What are the intentions of the client and attorney when the one entrusts to the other a demand to be collected or a claim to be enforced ? If the client were asked if he intended that his attorney should release or discharge the cause of action without payment or satisfaction the answer would be that he did not. Again, if asked if he intended that his attorney should select, control and manage the processes and remedies to be resorted to for the purpose of collecting or enforcing his claims the answer would be that he did; that he did not know the law and could not judge of these matters, and that he expected that his attorney was informed and could "properly decide upon them. The responses of the attorney to these questions would be similar to those of his employer.” Story on Agency (9th ed." § 140) says: “ Upon a similar ground notice of facts to an agent is constructive notice thereof to ■
The defendant had a right to presume, in the absence of all evidence or notice to the contrary, that whatever authority existed in the attorneys to receive the rejection at the time they served the claim, continued. (McNeilly v. Continental Life Ins. Co., 66 N. Y. 23: Insurance Co. v. McCain, 96 U. S. 84, 86.) Even if it were established that the retainer of Mr. Corwin was limited merely to the preparation of the claim, so that he had no actual authority even to serve it, that fact could not affect this question under the circumstances, in the absence of all evidence that the defendant knew or had any reason to know such limitation. The defendant was authorized to act upon the apparent powers of the agent, not upon secret instructions of the principal to him in limitation thereof. (Insurance Co. v. McCain, supra ; Angell v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 59 N. Y. 171, 174.) The learned counsel, Mr. Corwin, testifies
The order must be affirmed.
Bartlett, Woodward, Rich and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Order setting aside verdict and granting new trial affirmed, with costs. ' . ,