11 Paige Ch. 526 | New York Court of Chancery | 1845
The question whether Saxton, the solicitor in these causes, should be stricken from the rolls, cannot be disposed of upon this application. The statute requires that charges shall be first filed against him, and a copy thereof served. The proper course of proceedings, in such cases, is to file
As to the regularity of the proceedings of the complainants’ solicitor in these suits, it is evident that the subpoena, tested the 30th of January, and annexed to the affidavit of the solicitor in the first of the above entitled causes, is not the subpoena which was actually served upon some of the defendants in that suit, and which was served upon all the .defendants, except Crafts and Cook, before the bill was filed. (2 R. S. 179, § 76 [70.]) I am also satisfied that the subpoena fraudulently annexed to the affidavit of Windsor, the sheriff, as the one which he had served, was a subpoena that had been issued on the 8th of November 1842, in a suit against-Ernst only. The service of the subpoena in the first cause was therefore irregular, as to all the defendants in the first of the above causes. And the service of that subpoena, and all subsequent proceedings thereon, must be set aside for irregularity, except as to the defendant C. Cook, who does not join in this application; with costs to be taxed, and to be paid by L. C. Saxton, one of the complainants.
Whether there was any irregularity in the service of the subpoenas in the second cause, in which Ernst is not a party, does not distinctly appear; although from the alterations in the subpoena annexed to the affidavit in that suit, there is reason for supposing that it is the same subpoena which was originally served upon most of the defendants in the first of the above causes, in which Ernst was a party. However this may be, I am satisfied that the complainants ought not to be permitted to proceed further in either of these suits, until the costs of the defendants in a former suit, which was referred to the vice chancellor to be heard and decided, shall have been paid.
The defendants’ solicitor is also to be at liberty to file formal charges against the solicitor for the complainants, in relation to the alteration of the subpoenas annexed to his affidavit, and to the affidavit of the sheriff; stating therein the grounds of such charges against the solicitor, for malpractice, or other offences in relation to the proceedings in these suits; and to apply, ex parte, for the usual order thereon, for the solicitor of the complainants to show cause why he should not be stricken from the rolls. Or the solicitor for the'defendants) in these suits, may have per
Order accordingly.