6 How. Pr. 326 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851
Gridley, Justice.
The plaintiff resists this application on the ground that in as much as this judgment is in favor of the defendant, he is not within the purview of the section, which only authorizes the court to relieve a party against whom a judgment has been taken within one year after notice of the judgment. It may be admitted that the defendant is not within the words of the act; but he is obviously within its meaning and spirit; and as the act is remedial in its nature and object, it should receive a liberal interpretation. Besides, I am of the opinion, it was the intention of the legislature merely to declare the law as it before existed (see 2 R. S. 359, §3; Barheydt ads. Adams, 1 Wend. 101; Soulden vs. Cook, 4 Wend. 217).
2. The application is also resisted on the following state of facts, which are established by several affidavits. That before the cause was brought on for trial, a verbal agreement had been entered into between the attorney for the plaintiff and one of the attorneys of the defendant, that just such a judgment as that actually entered, should be taken at the circuit; and that the plaintiff’s attorney should not appear on the trial, and that the defendant’s costs should be limited to five dollars. The property in dispute was a canal boat, which the plaintiff claimed title to, as a purchaser on an execution. The defendant in his answer claimed title under a chattel mortgage, executed by a prior owner. The reply set up fraud in the mortgage, and that it conferred no title. The attorney of the plaintiff swears that he told the defendant’s attorney that it would cost the plaintiff a considerable sum to prepare for trial; and though he could do so, and beat the defendant, yet as the plaintiff had got the boat, he would ad
1. The courts have determined that the rule is not applicable to a case where a party has been led to rely on the stipulation, as the plaintiff did here, and allowed judgment to be entered against him. The ordinary doctrine of estoppel in pais would require the party who obtained the judgment by virtue of the stipulation, to abide by it afterwards (see 6 Cow. 385; 8 Cow. 119; 1 Hill, 627).
2. The agreement has been executed and has passed into a judgment and is now verified by the judgment, as well as rendered probable by the stipulation attached to the notice of trial. The defendant took such judgment, as he desired to do; and he can not vacate his own act, when it was done under an agreement on which the other party relied, and forbore to question on the trial the validity of the defendant’s mortgage.
Now, regarding this agreement as valid, as I am bound to do, it was no less than a compromise of a litigated suit, executed and carried into judgment; by which the plaintiff gave up his claim of proving the defendant’s mortgage fraudulent and void, and suffered a judgment of five dollars costs to pass against him;
The motion" must be denied with costs.