57 N.Y.S. 1097 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
In the Walter action brought to set aside the assignment, the complaint was dismissed, but the plaintiff, McLean,, was appointed permanent receiver, with power to bring an action< to set aside the said assignment. An appeal was taken by Garrison from so much of that judgment as appointed the receiver., January 24, 1898. Before the proposed case on appeal was served, this action was. commenced, and an ex parte injunction, dated March 2, 1898, was procured, and was subsequently made permanent till the trial of this action. A motion was made to dismiss Garrison’s appeal, and opposed on the ground that the injunction granted in this action had prevented the appellants from proceeding in the Walter action. This action was tried in April, 1898, and thereafter the decision was made, and on the 17th off December, 1898, a copy of judgment was entered setting aside the-assignment from the McAllister Company to Garrison, and therein the defendants in the action and all persons claiming under them were restrained from commencing or continuing any action- or proceeding to obtain possession of the assets of the said company, or otherwise interfering with the plaintiff in the discharge of his duties as receiver. On January 23, 1899, the defendant Garrison moved at special term to vacate or modify the injunction, so that he might proceed with his appeal in the Walter action, and this was denied on the ground of laches, and it is from the-order entered on that motion that this appeal is taken.
The terms of the injunction and order were broad enough to-make it dangerous for Garrison to proceed in the Walter suit without having it modified, and he was, therefore, not blamable for -not proceeding with his appeal until that was obtained. Thereafter, however, he did nothing in that direction beyond requesting this-plaintiff to stipulate to waive the injunction as to him. In the-Garrison action a judgment has been entered, and not appealed from, which destroys Garrison’s title as receiver. If Garrison should succeed on his appeal, the effect would be to throw everything into confusion,—the rights of third parties having intervened, and the accounts of the temporary receiver having been passed,—and the result would be to throw the fund among the-various creditors or claimants, to be scrambled for. If McLean’s; appointment was made without the court having jurisdiction, that question could be raised on appeal from the judgment in this action, on which also Garrison would have the opportunity to again vindicate his own title. What he is evidently aiming at, however,, is to destroy the plaintiff’s title as receiver. Such a result should' not be sanctioned unless Garrison is regular in his practice and has not been guilty of laches. . Upon the latter question, dates are important. The first stay or injunction was procured on March 2,1898, almost a year before the papers on this motion were served.
“This defendant has stood by without protest, and allowed the plaintiff herein to proceed undér his judgment of appointment, in the course of which the plaintiff brought this action, at an expense to the estate of $5oS in costs-of court alone. This defendant did not at that time seek to have the stay crin junction modified so that he could prosecute his appeal, but came m and contested the plaintiff’s title for the second time, and for the second time he was defeated. ’ He allowed the temporary receiver to account to the permanent receiver, and be discharged, with the usual incidents of counsel fees, commissions, referee’s and stenographer’s fees, and he made no protest or motion to modify the injunction. The receiver advertised for claims and proceeded to collect the assets, with more expense incurred, but still no protest from the said defendant. ’The judgment was served adjudging him to have-no title, and directing him to account. The time to appeal expired, and he served his account, pursuant to the direction of the judgment; yet he protested not. The attachment creditors moved for a direction to have the money-in the hands of the receiver applied to the payment of their attachments. The two largest of these attaching creditors—Patrick Brady, to the sum of' $2,718.35, and Thomas Matthews, to the sum of $3,054.44—are the persons preferred in the general assignment, and were, respectively, the father-in-law and intimate personal friend of the president of the company, by which the assignment was made. This defendant allowed the receiver to resist this assault on the fund, and only after the attaching creditors withdrew from the direct attack does this defendant come in and seek to be allowed to prosecute his-appeal. In the meantime, the justice before whom the cause was tried, and by whom the case would have to be settled, has retired from the bench.”
To meet the force of the argument based on his delay in moving, Garrison says that he requested the attorney for the receiver to stipulate to waive the injunction .as far as the appeal was concerned. The receiver, however, insists that Garrison was not stayed; that he refused to stipulate to waive the stay, and wrote to Garrison’s attorneys “that any stipulation which the receiver would be justified in giving, the court would grant the same relief upon motion, and that such a stipulation might be deemed by the-court to be a waiver of the laches of the defendant.in prosecuting said appeal.” To do nothing further than to request the stipulation or waiver which was refused does not excuse the prolonged inaction of Garrison, who could have moved the court for the relief he now seeks before the expenses had been incurred, before-the plaintiff had accounted, and without waiting upon the chances- or the result of the issues in this action. His excuse based on his view that he was stayed is not entirely ingenuous. The receiver told him that he did not regard the stay as applying to his appeal, and, instead of taking the receiver at his word, he insisted on a stipulation before proceeding, and, that being refused, he-waited until unsuccessful in this action before he made his application to the court. His conduct is fairly open to the inference that he was desirous of first testing the plaintiff's title in this action, and only when defeated therein was he stirred into activity in the direction of making an appeal that can be of no avail to-himself, but might be fatal to plaintiff’s title as temporary receiver. The judge below was right in denying the motion on the-ground of laches, and the order should be affirmed, with costs. All: concur.