38 A.D. 68 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The answer which the appellant attempted to serve was signed by C. Arthur Coan as defendant’s attorney. The plaintiff’s attorney declined to receive it on the ground that this defendant had appeared by Charles S. Bloomfield as his attorney, and that Mr. Coan had not been substituted for Mr. Bloomfield. There is no contention that the appellant had ever appeared in the action in the manner prescribed by section-421 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Mr. Bloomfield, however, had obtained from the plaintiff’s attorney four extensions of time for the defendants to answer. One of these stipulations expressed the extension to be upon condition that the rents of the mortgaged premises should be paid to the plaintiff’s attorney, and it was signed not only by the attorney for the plaintiff but by Charles S. Bloomfield, defendants’ attorney. The position of the respondent is, that by thus obtaining these extensions, the appellant appeared in the action by Mr. Bloomfield as his attorney, and that until another attorney was substituted the appellant could not put in an answer signed by any one else. (Code Civ. Proc. § 520.) The appellant, on the other hand, insists that all that was done by Mr. Bloomfield did not amount to an appearance, and that he was still at liberty' to put in an answer and thus appear in the action by any other attorney whom he saw fit to employ. If so, his answer should not have been returned, and the direction to the plaintiff’s attorney to receive it should not have been made by the Special Term conditional upon the payment of costs.
It has been held at Special Term in New York county that the
We think a correct construction of section 421 of the Code was • adopted in the cases cited, and that it should be adhered to as establishing a definite rule of practice, the strict observance of which will do much to prevent vexatious misunderstandings between attor- ■ neys. While the act of Mr. Bloomfield in' subscribing himself as attorney for defendants may have sufficed to operate as a waiver by defendants of irregularities or even as an affirmative submission to the jurisdiction of the court, under the authority of Douglas v. Haberstro (8 Abb. N. C. 230) and like cases, it was not an appearance which prevented the service of an answer signed by another-attorney without substitution. Since, therefore, the' appellant had not appeared in the action until he served the answer' signed by Mr. Coan, he was entitled, to have that answer received as a matter of right, and the order below was erroneous in so far as it imposed any conditions upon him.
All concurred.
Order modified, so as to omit the requirement that the appellant shall pay twenty-five dollars costs, and stipulate to try the case on a date specified; and as thus modified, affirmed, without costs of this appeal.. . •