105 A.D. 542 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This action was commenced by the service of a summons and complaint on the 18th day of January, 1899. A second action was brought on or about the 22d day of March, 1901, and on the twelfth day of June of that year the two actions were consolidated. In both of these actions Lorenz Reich was and still is thq plaintiff. William F. Cochran was the defendant therein until the 27th day of December, 1901, when he died intestate, and thereafter his executors were substituted as defendants herein. Both actions were brought 'to set aside certain leases, agreements, bonds and mortgages, orders and judgments entered in favor of the defendant Cochran and against the plaintiff. The plaintiff claims that by reason thereof he has been deprived of title to the leasehold premises described in the complaint. The judgment in this action has
We have no hesitancy in announcing that the agreement between the parties resulting in the loan of $130,000 by Cochran to Reich constituted usury, and was, therefore, void. The undisputed facts in that connection show that when Reich applied to Cochran to increase the loan of $100,000 to $130,000 Cochran first flattered Reich upon the bargain which he had secured in obtaining the leasehold interest and the large amount of money which he could make ■therefrom. Having produced a proper frame of mind in Reich as to the large value of his lease, and regarding his absolute necessity of procuring a loan in order to make it available, he suggested to him that in addition to the six per cent reserved upon the loan he
Reaching this conclusion, we are called upon to consider the effect-of the orders, judgments and other proceedings which resulted ultimately in the dispossession of Reich from the leasehold premises. Through an innumerable number of agreements and exactions Cochran had become possessed of title by assignment from Reich to; the leasehold estate, and also by bill of sale had become the owner of the furniture and fixtures in the hotel. On the 1st day of February,. 1888, he made what purported to be a lease of the leasehold premises and of the furniture and fixtures in the hotel to Reich, and on the same?, date executed an agreement whereby upon certain terms therein specified Reich was to be permitted to repurchase the premises. Upon the; face of these instruments the relation established between Cochran.
The foregoing is a skeleton statement of the various litigations and proceedings had between • these parties. It is apparent therefrom that the judgment, final orders and nearly all the other determi
This service was authorized by subdivision 2 of section 2240 of the Code of Civil Procedure and the proof of service is, in all respects, sufficient. (Code Civ. Proc. § 2243 ; Matter of Rathburn, 10 N. Y. St. Repr. 268.) The petition having been sufficient upon its face to confer jurisdiction upon the magistrate to issue the precept, and the' precept having been issued and properly served, it follows that the court acquired jurisdiction of the proceeding and of the person against whom the precept was issued.
The plaintiff claims, however, that a demand for the payment of the rent which was a condition precedent to instituting the proceedings was never, in fact, made upon Reich. It may be so conceded and also conceded that the precept, in fact, was not served upon Walmsley or upon Reich; that the rent was not due at the time when the proceeding was instituted as Reich had ten days in which to pay it after the first of the month, which time had not elapsed. It may be conceded that all of these objections existed as matter of fact. Assuming that they did, it in nowise affected the jurisdiction of the court. That remained as ample and complete as though each defect were without existence. The rule by which the jurisdiction of an inferior court is to be tested does not depend upon such questions. In Dyokman v. Mayor, etc., of New York (5 N. Y. 434) the rule is stated in these words: “ When the jurisdiction of a court of limited authority depends on a fact, which must be ascertained by that court, and such fact appears and is stated in the record of its proceedings, a party to such proceedings who had an opportunity to controvert the jurisdictional fact but did not, and contested upon the merits, cannot afterwards, in a collateral action against his adversary in those proceedings, impeach the record and shew the jurisdictional fact therein stated to be untrue.” And it might have been added that if the party did not appear in such case, but had opportunity to so appear and contest the fact- and did not, the determination of the court would still be valid. The rule
Reaching the conclusion that the District Court was possessed of jurisdiction, was the judgment obtained by the fraud of Cochran ? The court below did not make a direct finding of fraud. Its language is that by reason of the facts to which we have already adverted, “ Cochran thereby fraudulently took and obtained an unfair and undue advantage over Reich.” This falls short of a ■finding that in the procurement of the final order Cochran perpetrated an actual and affirmative fraud in obtaining it. In construe
Reaching this conclusion, the case of the plaintiff comes to rest upon his right to relief, based solely upon the negligence of his attorney in the conduct not only of the District Court proceeding, but of all the proceedings had and taken. It is not claimed that there was any collusion between Cochran, or his attorney, or of any person acting in his behalf, and Reich’s attorney. On the contrary, it affirmatively appears that however negligent the latter may have been, or misguided as to his views of the law or otherwise, he from time to time presented the case of Reich with ability and skill and raised in connection with this final order very serious legal questions, which every court treated seriously and elaborately in their ■disposition. After the action of Reich v. Cochran was commenced, ■every proceeding, beginning with the first summary proceeding to ■dispossess Reich for non-payment of taxes down to the one in which the final order was entered, Cochran’s attorney immediately availed himself of by setting them u,p in supplemental answers. So that irom beginning to end the parties were constantly advised of the ■claims made as to the force and effect which Cochran claimed arose from the several proceedings. The stipulation which was made in the action before Mr. Justice Lxgraham, it is stated, constituted gross neglect. It is not claimed that it was in any sense collusive. Evidently the making of that stipulation foreclosed the plaintiff’s obtaining any relief in that action. It was not a stipulation, however, which was negligently made, for the reason that had none been made and had the defendant been remitted to proof of the final order and the proceedings which led up to it, it would have ¡shown precisely the same facts which were embraced within it. The most, therefore, that can be said of this is that it was a mistake of law if anything. That the attorney was guilty of negligence in other matters, and that such negligence operated to defeat the right of Reich to any relief, is apparent from the ■evidence and found by the trial court, although the court felt called
The cases relied upon by the respondent in support of the judgment in the main arose either in an action wherein there existed affirmative fraud or where the application for relief was made in the action itself. As to the former of these cases the argument proceeds upon the theory that the 63d finding of fact, to which we have already adverted, was a finding of fraud. If that were true, and the ■evidence supported it, we should have no hesitancy in agreeing with the learned counsel for Reich that he was entitled to relief. These cases as authority at once fall to the ground when it appears that the finding is not one of fraud, nor is the evidence sufficient to support such a finding, had one been made. Ro case is ■called to ,our attention where the equitable rule has authorized a •court of equity to grant the relief upon a collateral attack under ■such circumstances. The rule is otherwise where the motion is made directly in the action itself. Under such circumstances the negligence, ignorance or fraud of an attorney may be taken advantage of in a proper case. (Sharp v. Mayor, etc., of New York, 31 Barb. 578; Gideon v. Dwyer, 17 Misc. Rep. 233 ; affd., 7 App. Div. 608 ; Vilas v. P. & M. R. R. Co., 123 N. Y. 440.) But the rule which might apply in such a case has no application to the present. In the discussion thus far we have purposely omitted any reference to the effect of the appearance by Hewitt upon the return day of the precept in the summary proceedings. Defendant’s attorney was authorized to appear and, being so authorized, we think that he had authority to request an appearance by another attorney for him, and while undoubtedly the attorney ought to have attended to the matter himself, yet as he could request such appearance and did, it was
If these views be sound, it follows that on the defendants’ appeal the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J.,.Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred ; O’Brien, J., dissented.
On the plaintiff’s appeal, appeal dismissed,
Decision changed by Hatch, J., from “ judgment affirmed ” to “ appeal dismissed.”