94 N.Y.S. 404 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This action was commenced by the service of a summons and complaint on the 18th day of January, 1889. A second action was brought on or about the 22d day of March, 1901, and on the 12th day of June of that year two actions were consolidated. In both of these actions Lorenz Reich was and still is the plaintiff. William F. Cochran was the defendant therein until the 27th day of December, 1901, when he died testate, 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 vacated and set aside certain agreements made between the original parties to the action, and through which William F. Cochran came into possession of the premises known as the “Cambridge Hotel,” on the southwest corner of Fifth avenue and Thirty-Third street, in the city of New York. It further provided that the plaintiff should be restored to the possession of the said premises. It also vacated and set aside numerous judgments and orders obtained by Cochran against the plaintiff, and restrains the defendants from availing themselves of certain other judgments in Cochran’s favor. The judgment also provides that an accounting be had between the parties, and that the plaintiff, within six months after the entry of final judgment, pay to the defendants any balance that may be found due from the plaintiff upon such accounting. The defendants have appealed from the whole of the interlocutory judgment and the plaintiff from so much thereof as imposed terms and provided for the accounting. The numerous agreements which were made between the original parties to this action, the relations established thereby, and the various forms in which the litigation has assumed, arising out of such agreements and relations, have complicated the facts, and accumulated a record in this action of formidable proportions. We do not find it necessary to state at this time in chronological order the events which have happened from the inception of the engagement between the original parties to the present interlocutory judgment. We shall content ourselves by a statement of such, facts as are essential to the development of the reasons which control our judgment in logical order of discussion.
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 hi's 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 6 per cent, interest reserved upon the loan, he should also give to Cochran a certain suite of rooms in the hotel, the rental value of which was $5,000 a year, free of rent, during the existence of their relations in connec
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 and Reich was that of landlord and tenant. On the 19th day of September, 1891, Cochran claimed that Reich was in default in the payment of taxe1secured to be paid by the lease, and on that day he commenced summary proceedings in the District Court of the city of New York for the purpose of obtaining possession of the premises, based upon such default. The taxes were subsequently paid, and the proceeding discontinued. Thereafter Cochran brought a suit against Reich in the Supreme Court in Westchester county upon a note given by Reich to secure payment of rent due under the lease. In that action Reich interposed an answer, setting up as a defense that the lease was part of a transaction, which rendered it a mortgage, and that the same was usurious and void. This suit was never tried. On November 5, 1891, an action was commenced by Reich against Cochran in the Supreme Court, New York county, wherein ■he demanded judgment that two certain mortgages executed by Reich to Cochran be declared usurious and void, that the Cochran
“For the purposes of this motion it is conceded that in August last a proceeding was instituted in the Sixth Judicial District Court in the City of New York, whereby this defendant sought to dispossess the plaintiff on the ground that there was a certain amount of rent due under the lease that is set up in the complaint, and that such proceedings were had on the 17th of August, 1892, a judgment was entered in favor of the petitioner that said petitioner have possession of the premises therein described by reason of the nonpayment of the tenant’s rent, and that a warrant issue to remove the said tenant and all persons from the said premises, and to put the petitioner in full possession thereof; that subsequently this plaintiff paid the amount stated in the petition as claimed to be due for rent.”
The Court of Appeals, in passing upon the effect of this stipulation, said:
“We think, when properly construed, this stipulation must be regarded as an admission that a proper and valid judgment was entered in favor of the petitioner. Under the circumstances we are of the opinion that the plaintiff is not in a position to raise any question as to the regularity or validity of that judgment.” Reich v. Cochran, 151 N. Y. 122, 45 N. E. 367, 37 L. R. A. 805, 56 Am. St. Rep. 607.
Upon this stipulation and the proceedings the Supreme Court determined that the judgment or order of the District Court of the City
The plaintiff claims, however, that a demand for the payment of the rent, which was a condition precedent to instituting the proceeding, 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 no wise 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 Dyckman v. City 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 show 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 announced in the case cited has been confirmed by judicial expression and decisions since its announcement. Roderigas v. East River Savings Inst., 63 N. Y. 460, 20 Am. Rep. 555; Bolton v. Schriever, 135 N. Y. 65, 31 N. E. 1001, 18 L. R. A. 242; Matter of Patterson’s Estate, 146 N. Y. 327, 40 N. E. 990. In the Roderigas Case, supra, such rule was applied in a case where there was an affirmative allegation in a petition for letters of administration that the person was dead when in fact he was alive, and yet the-court held that such fact did not defeat the jurisdiction of the court to act upon the petition. Each of the specific matters relied" -upon to defeat jurisdiction appeared before the court in some form, and upon each of such questions the court was required to ascertain the fact, and as each appeared and was stated in the record of the proceedings it became conclusive upon jurisdiction the moment they were determined by the court to exist. The facts as to-whether a demand for the rent had been made, or that any was due, when the proceeding was instituted, was matter of defense, and presented issuable facts. If contested and found against the contestant, or if uncontested and so found, the determination in-each case was equally within the jurisdiction of the court, and the final order pronounced thereon became as valid during its existence as though the jurisdiction were admitted. It is evident,, therefore, that the finding of the trial court that the District Court
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 airead)' 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 construction the finding is that, having obtained the final order, which may. have been without fraud, he took and obtained thereby an unfair advantage. It is elementary that the presumption is against misconduct in business relations, that fraud must be established affirmatively, and, if the acts attacked are consistent with an honest intent, fraud is not established. Shultz v. Hoagland, 85 N. Y. 464. The facts relied upon to establish the fraud in this connection are the claimed false affidavit of Bagg that he served the demand upon Reich for the payment of the rent, and that Cochran acted thereon by setting up the same in his petition, and thus by a false affidavit established the necessary fact; and, further, that he knew at the time when the proceeding was instituted that the rent was not due. There is no proof to show that Bagg in fact knew that his affidavit was false. It is not claimed that he did not serve upon somebody, whom he supposed was Reich, and there is not the slightest evidence to show that Cochran had any knowledge whatever that the affidavit made by Bagg was not true in fact. If Bagg served the notice upon the person whom he supposed to be Reich, and made the affidavit in the honest belief that he had served him, there could not be the slightest ground upon which to predicate fraud; and the same is true of the acceptance by Cochran of Bagg’s statement, which was incorporated in the petition. By the terms of the lease, the rent reserved was payable on the 1st of August,' although Reich had 10 days of grace in which to pay after the same fell due. He could not, therefore, be proceeded against prior to the expiration of the 10 days, but such fact did not destroy the date upon which the rent became payable, which was the first of the month. The petition was made upon the 9th of August, one day before the days of grace had expired, but the precept was not issued until the 12th day of August, two days after the day of grace had expired, and it was made returnable on the 17th; so that at the time when the petition was presented to the court the rent had become due and payable, and at the time when the petition was acted upon there was no barrier in the way, nor
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 aijd 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 nonpayment of taxes down to the one in which the final order was entered, Cochran’s attorney immediately availed himself by setting them up in supplemental answers. So that from 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 Ingraham 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 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 fqund by the trial court, although the court felt called upon, as we do, to acquit the attorney from any intentional wrongdoing therein. It is not necessary that we call attention in detail to every specific act of negligence which appears in the record. We reach the conclusion upon such subject that the finding of the court that there was negligence is supported by the testimony, and we also think that in its effect it operated in preventing Reich from .enforcing his legal rights. Having reached this conclusion, the question with which we are confronted is, can the plaintiff have the relief for which he has asked, and in part been granted by the
“Courts of equity have general jurisdiction to grant relief against fraud, and to set aside ail deeds, contracts, and other instruments obtained by fraudulent practices; and the jurisdiction of the court to grant such relief extends not only to voluntary contracts inter partes, but also to judgments and decrees of courts. But the solemn judgment of a court should not be lightly interfered with. It is for the interest of the public, as well as of individuals, that there should be an end of litigation; and, where parties have been lawfully brought into a court having jurisdiction of their persons and the subject of litigation, and have had opportunity to prosecute their claims and to defend their rights, and judgment has been regularly pronounced, while such judgment is not vacated or reversed, it concludes the parties thereto; and a matter thus once litigated and adjudicated cannot be again brought into question. Such are the general rules, which should not easily be evaded. A party defeated in a litigation may appeal from the judgment or move for a new trial, and, in a proper case, to vacate and set aside the judgment These remedies are generally ample to protect all parties. But where there is fraud, not in the subject of the litigation, not in anything which was involved in the issues tried, but fraud practiced upon a party or upon the court during the trial or in prosecuting the action, or in obtaining the judgment, then in a proper case the judgment may be attacked collaterally, and on account thereof set aside and vacated. But, before a regular judgment can be thus assailed, the proof should be clear and very satisfactory. It is not sufficient merely to raise a suspicion, or to show what is sometimes called constructive fraud, but there must be actual fraud. There must be by one party a false and fraudulent representation, or a fraudulent affirmative act, or a fraudulent concealment of a fact for the purpose of obtaining an undue and an unjust advantage of the other party and procuring an unjust and unconscionable judgment”
Mayor, etc., v. Brady, 115 N. Y. 599, 22 N. E. 237; Stilwell v. Carpenter, 59 N. Y. 414.
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 sixty-third fin.ding 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 the respondent 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. No 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. The Mayor, 31 Barb. 578; Gideon v. Dwyer, 17 Misc. Rep. 233, 40 N. Y. Supp. 1053, affirmed 7 App. Div. 608, 41 N. Y. Supp. 1116; Vilas v. P. & M. R. R. Co., 123 N. Y. 440, 25 N. E. 941, 9 L. R. A. 844, 20 Am. St. Rep. 771. 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 oil the defendant’s appeal the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concur, except O’BRIEN, J., who dissents.