Neele v. Berryhill

4 How. Pr. 16 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1849

Welles, Justice.

If it were not for the fact that the plaintiff’s attorney in the first two causes directed the entry of the second judgments in those causes, on the 26th of January, I should have no difficulty in disposing of this application. The plaintiff’s attorney had done all in his power, and all the law required of him, when he left the statements with the clerk to be filed. It was then the duty of the clerk to endorse upon upon them, and enter in the judgment book, judgments of the Supreme Court for the amount confessed, with five dollars costs in each case. The statements and affidavits, with the judgments endorsed, would have thereupon become the judgment rolls, (§ 337 of the code) and if the clerk for any reason, not connected with the plaintiffs, as implying their direction or consent, had omitted any part of his duty, the court on application made in a reasonable time, would direct the thing done, which had been thus omitted by the clerk, as of the time it should have been done. It is a settled principle with the comt, that its suitors shall not be prejudiced by the mistakes or misprisions of its officers; and amendments in such cases, are generally matters of course. (Close v. Gillispie, 3 J. R. 526; Seaman and others v. Drake, 1 C. R. 9; Chichester and others v. Cande, 3 Cow. R. 39.) The case ex rel. Butler and others v. Lew. Com. Pleas, (10 W. R. 541) is supposed to be an authority against the motion. In that case, the judgment record had been signed by a judge of the County Courts, not the first judge nor of the decree of counsellor of the Supreme Court, and in a case where the statute required it to be signed by either the clerk, the first judge or some other judge being of the degree of counsellor, &c.

On a motion in the Common Pleas to set it aside, for that defect, the court allowed the plaintiff leave to have the record properly signed and filed nunc pro tunc. The Supreme Court granted a mandamus, commanding the judges of the Common Pleas to vacate the rule made by them, and to set aside the judgment so jar as the relators were concerned, who were junior judgment creditors. ¡Nelson, Justice, who gave the opinion, recognizes the rule I have stated, and refers to the authorities I have cited without disapprobation; but distinguishes the case from those, on the ground that the judge who signed the record, acted without authority and *19beyond his jurisdiction. On that subj ect he says, the case does not fall within the rule, that the court will not permit a party to suffer by the errors of its officer. So far as the act of signing was concerned, the judge was not an officer of the court, he having no more right to perform it than any other individual.” The decision was put mainly on the provision of the Revised Statutes, (2 R. S. 360, § 11,) which declares that no judgment shall be deemed valid so as to authorize any proceedings thereon, until the record thereof shall be signed and filed; and § 12, which declares that no judgment shall effect any lands, &c. or have any preference as against other judgment creditors, &c. until the record thereof be filed and docketed, &c. He regarded the record in that case of no more validity than if the attorney had filed it, when it came from the hand of his clerk, and as a mere blank piece of paper, so far as the judgment was concerned. The case is therefore plainly distinguishable from the present. If the error in that case had been committed by the clerk so as to bring it within the rule referred to, I think it clearly inferable that the decision would have been the other way.

But it is urged, among other things, that by the second or re-entry of the judgments in the first two causes, on the 26th of January, and that by the direction of the attorney for the plaintiffs, whatever rights may have existed prior to that time to have the omissions of the clerk supplied, were by that act waived, and that by refiling the statements and perfecting regular judgments on that day, the power of the clerk, and the authority of the statements were exhausted; and that the judgments were good 'and valid in all respects as of the day last mentioned, and it is denied that the court has now any power to grant the relief asked for.

There is certainly plausibility in these positions; and yet, I do not think they form an insurmountable obstacle to the interposition of the equitable power of the court in the premises. Suppose the clerk, as is fairly to be intended from his affidavits, entered the second judgments on the 26th of January upon his own suggestion and without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff’s attorney; I do not see but in that case his authority and the force of the statements, would be expended as much as if he had done it by direction of the attorney. It would then, as much as in any other case, have been a mistake of the officer of the court. A party should not be permitted to suffer by the act of the clerk in mutilating records or papers in his office any more than by his omission to perform a plain duty.

It is furthermore said, that when the attorney discovered the omissions ■on the 26th of January, he had an election to apply to the court for the *20relief to which it might then have been entitled, or to take new judgments as of that time; and having chosen the latter course he has determined his election, and is bound by it. In the first place, the clerk represents it to have been his own act, and done upon his own suggestion. The proof to the contrary is circumstantial, consisting of the fact that the endorsements upon the statements are in the handwriting of the attorney, and his admissions and declarations sworn to in the affidavits read in opposition to the motion, to which no contradiction or explanation could be offered. Such declarations and admissions made by the attorney would not be received in evidence against a party, upon the trial of an issue, because it would be hearsay evidence, and the attorney would be a competent witness to the fact alleged to have been admitted by him. And the rule should be the same on a motion in regard to opposing affidavits, which the moving party has no opportunity of answering, especially since the Legislature has provided a way to obtain the evidence, (2 R. S. 554 1st ed. §24.)

The handwriting of the attorney, alone, proves nothing, as it was competent for the clerk to request or employ him or any one else to make the endorsements, and it will be deemed as having been done by the clerk. In the present case, they were subscribed by the clerk himself. In the next place, if the act was done by the express direction of the attorney, it was not, in my judgment, such a determination of an election as to conclude the party. The rule which I have mentioned and repeatedly referred to, extends to the mistakes and omissions of attorneys, as officers of the court. This is expressly held in the case of Close v. Gillispie, already cited. Spencer, Justice, in that case says: I cannot discover any difference, as to the allowing of an amendment, whether the mistake has happened through the omission of an attorney, or by that of a clerk. Both are equally officers of the court." Such is the rule in the English courts. (4 Burr, 2449.) I think, if an attorney has power, by virtue of his general retainer, to determine an election for his client, in a case where a substantial right is involved, (as to which there may be doubt,) that this should not be deemed such determination, but rather a mistake arising under a new system of practice, with which the courts as well as the legal professions are as yet but little acquainted.

And, finally, I think the 149th section of the Code of Procedure has made provision which fully covers this case. That section reads as follows : “ The court may, at any time, in furtherance of justice, and on such terms as may be proper, amend any pleading or proceeding, by adding or striking out the name of any party, or (may amendI) a mistake in *21any other respect, or by inserting other allegations material to the case, or by conforming the pleading or proceeding to the facts proved, whenever the amendment shall not change substantially the cause of action or defence.” The words, in a parenthesis, '■‘may amend” are not in the section, but must be understood, in order to make sense of that part of the section. This section invests the court with very enlarged powers of amendment; and it is well that it does so, as otherwise the code itself, owing to its numerous, new, and complicated provisions, would have amounted, in many instances, for a considerable time to come, to nearly a denial of justice.

The only remaining question is, will the amendment or relief asked for be in furtherance of justice? Of this I have no doubt. To deny it would be unjust. It would be leaving a party to suffer by the neglect of the officers of the court. Ho injustice will be done by granting it, as the judgment in the last cause was perfected with knowledge of the rights of the plaintiffs in the other two, and no judgments in favor of other persons have been entered against the defendant in the meantime, or since the plaintiffs in those causes were entitled to have their judgments perfected.

The plaintiffs in the first and second causes are entitled to have the statements filed, and judgments regularly perfected thereon, according to ch. 3, of title 12, of part 2 of the code, as of the times they were originally filed with the clerk, (the 4th and 12th December, 1848,) and to have the judgments entered on the statements on the 26th of January, 1849, together with the filing of the statements and docketing the judgments on that day, vacated—a rule or rules may be entered accordingly—no costs of motion are allowed to either party as against the other.