5 N.Y.S. 88 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
This action was brought by the plaintiff, who was an infant of about the age of three years, to recover damages for an injury alleged to have been sustained by himself, in "consequence of the negligence of the defendant. It was tried at the circuit, and a verdict recovered in his favor. The judgment upon the verdict was affirmed at the general term, but reversed at the court of appeals. Miller v. Woodhead, 104 N. Y. 471, 11 N. E. Rep. 57. The effect of the reversal was to defeat the plaintiff’s action, and judgment was finally obtained dismissing the complaint, and for the recovery of the sum of $756.41 costs. An execution was issued in the action against the property of the guardian, and returned unsatisfied. A motion was thereupon made on behalf of the defendant for leave to issue an execution against the person of William 0. To wen, who was the guardian ad litem of the plaintiff. After the argument, and before the decision of the motion, the defendant died, and it was ordered to abate unless it should be continued by the proper parties within six months from the date of the entry of the order. An administratrix of the estate was appointed by the surrogate of the county of New York on the 8th of June, 1888, within the six months mentioned in the order, but, as she did not make herself a party to the proceeding, the motion finally abated. She, however, assigned the judgment to Hobert Oakley, who is the appellant, and he afterwards applied for leave to issue an execution against the person of the guardian, and the motion made in his behalf was denied by the court, and from the order entered upon the decision he has taken this appeal.
The final abatement of the motion made in behalf of the defendant in the action presented no legal objection to the success of the application made on behalf of the assignee. It decided nothing, but simply terminated the proceeding on the motion, without any decision whatever as to the right of the defendant to the execution against the person of the guardian. It was therefore no answer to the application made on behalf of this assignee. The action was brought for a wrong, upon which, if the plaintiff liad recovered, an execution against the person of the defendant might have been issued. Code Civil Proc. § 1487. And, as the plaintiff failed to recover finally in the action, the defendant was entitled to an execution of this description for the collection of the costs recovered by him. The Code, by section 1 )76, has further provided that, “where the party recovering a final judgment has died, execution may be issued at any time within five years after the entry of the judgment, by his personal representatives, or by the assignee of the judgment, if it has been assigned, and the execution must be indorsed with the name and residence of the person issuing the same.” The final judgment in the action was recovered on the 15th of November, 1887, and this section accordingly secured tlieright to issue an execution for its collection at the time when the application for leave to issue it was finally decided. When the action has been brought, as this was, in the name of an infant plaintiff, the Code, by section 469, has declared that his guardian shall be responsible for the costs thereof. This is an absolute and unqualified liability. And by section 3249 of the Code of Civil Procedure it has been further declared, “ where costs are awarded against an infant plaintiff, they may be collected by execution or otherwise from his guardian ad litem, in like manner as if the latter was the plaintiff.” This was a modification as well as an amelioration of the preceding law; for by section 316 of the Code of Procedure it was declared that “when costs are adjudged against an infant plaintiff, * * * payment thereof may be enforced by attachment.” And such an attachment, when issued by leave of the court, was enforceable against the person of the guardian. Prior to that enactment the remedy was still more rigorous; for the attachment issued as a process to punish the guardian for non-payment, as a contempt. Wice v. Insurance Co., 8 Daly, 70; Grantman v. Thrall, 31 How. Pr. 464. The last change which has in this manner been effected by the Code of Civil Procedure has relieved the guardian of some of the severity of the preceding practice;