56 N.Y.S. 16 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The judgment here was in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for $10,651.82 damages and costs. Upon appeal therefrom to this Appellate Division that judgment was affirmed, with costs. ° Thereupon the defendants retained a new attorney, Mr. Alexander Thain, without procuring an order of substitution, and Mr. Thain, on their behalf, filed and served a notice of appeal to the Court of Appeals, and also an undertaking to perfect such appeal and to stay the plaintiff’s proceedings thereon. This notice of appeal, together with the copy of the undertaking served upon the plaintiff’s attorneys, was returned to Mr. Thain, with a notice stating that they were so returned because he was not the defendants’ attorney of record in the action, and further stating that the plaintiff’s attorneys declined to recognize his authority until he had been duly substituted as the defendants’ attorney. The court below, upon the defendants’ motion, required the plaintiff’s attorneys to accept the notice of appeal and undertaking, and we think this direction was correct.
Rule 3 of the Oourt of Appeals provides as follows :
*367 “ The attorneys and guardians ad litem of the respective parties in the court below shall be deemed the attorneys and guardians of the same parties respectively, in this court, until others shall be retained or appointed and notice thereof shall be served on the adverse party.”
Under this rule the defendants’ original attorney of record, Mr. George William Hart, was authorized to act for the defendants upon an appeal to the Court of Appeals until a new attorney was retained, but only until then. Upon the retainer of Mr. Thain, Mr. Hart’s authority ceased. The rule does not require substitution by order of the court. A party desiring to appeal might be seriously prejudiced by such a requirement. Should a dispute arise with his existing attorney as to compensation, and should the latter decline to proceed until paid, the delay in judicially settling the dispute might last until after the time to appeal had expired, and thus the client’s right of appeal might be jeopardized. The right to appeal promptly and without incidental embarrassment or inconvenience is an important one, and this was, doubtless, considered in the framing of the rule. The finality of the previous proceedings is thereby recognized and judicious provision made for the new. The old attorneys are, without fresh authority, deemed the attorneys of the same clients in the Court of Appeals. They are, however, so “deemed” only until others are retained. The words “or appointed,” which immediately follow the word “ retained,” refer to the guardians ad litem, who cannot be retained by the parties, but must be appointed by the court. If it had been intended to require the action of the court in the case of attorneys as wéll, the word “ substituted ” would undoubtedly have been used instead of '“ retained.” The intention plainly was, while leaving the attorneys undisturbed in the absence of a contrary expression of desire on the part of the clients, to permit the latter freely and at pleasure to obtain other counsel upon their appeal.
The authorities which hold that a substitution is required upon appeal are all cases of an appeal from the Special or Trial Terms to the former General Term, or to the present Appellate Division. This rule of the Court of Appeals was referred to in but one of them. (Shuler v. Maxwell, 38 Hun, 240.) Its construction and ■ effect, however, were not presented for consideration.
The order appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and the disbursements of this appeal.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.