38 A.D. 215 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
Lead Opinion
After the judgment obtained by the plaintiff on the. trial hacl been affirmed by the Court of Appeals the defendant applied to and obtained from the Special Term, upon the ground, among others, of newly-discovered evidence, a new trial upon condition, however, that within a time specified he pay to the plaintiff all the costs (except an extra allowance) and disbursements then taxable, and also deliver to him an undertaking in the sum of $50,000, conditioned for the payment of any judgment the, plaintiff might thereafter recover. The defendant endeavored to comply with the conditions thus •imposed by offering to pay such costs, and disbursements, and to. deliver. the undertaking, both of which the plaintiff declined to-accept on the ground that he proposed to appeal from the order-granting the new trial. The plaintiff thereafter did appeal and the-order was subsequently affirmed by this court. After such, affirmance the plaintiff sought to induce the defendant to pay the costs, and disbursements and give the undertaking, but he declined to do so upon the ground that he had complied with the order in that respect by making the offer above referred to. A motion was then made by the plaintiff to vacate the order granting the new trial unless the defendant complied with the conditions as to the payment of costs and the giving of the undertaking, and after a hearing an order was made to that effect from which the defendant appealed.
We think the order was right. " The court in its discretion imposed, as a condition of the defendant’s having a new trial, the payment to the plaintiff of the costs and disbursements, and also the giving of an undertaking to satisfy any judgment that the plaintiff might thereafter obtain. This condition was not satisfied by the offer made by the defendant. An offer to pay an amount due may discharge a lien, but it does not pay a debt or discharge an obligation
We are of the opinion, however, that the defendant should be made good for any and all disbursements which may have been ■incurred by him by reason of the plaintiff’s refusal to accept the-costs and undertaking when offered ; and for that reason the order-appealed from should be modified to the extent of permitting the-Special Term to determine that fact, and such disbursements, if any,, should be deducted from the costs directed to be paid to the plaintiff, and as thus modified the order should be affirmed, without costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., and Rumsey, J., concurred; Ingraham and. Barrett, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I cannot concur in the affirmance of an ordei of the Special Term vacating an ordér which had been duly made upon notice to all the-parties and upon appeal affirmed by this court. When the new trial was originally granted it was upon condition that the defendant pay the costs of the action and give a bond to secure any judgment that the plaintiff should obtain against him. These conditions the defendant complied with. He tendered the costs and the bond, and the plaintiff refused to accept them, for the sole reason that he-intended to appeal from the order. He made no application, however, for a stay of proceedings or for an extension of the time-within which he might elect to accept the conditions of the order,.
I dissent from the affirmance of the order.
Dissenting Opinion
I concur with Justice Ingraham in his dissent. The learned judge below decided the application upon an erroneous view of the -effect of an appeal from an order. He intimates that the order appealed from was suspended by the appeal. And he granted the plaintiff’s application upon this theory. As I understand it, my brethren do not concur in this view. ■ There is, in fact, no provision of the Code which sustains it.- Hpon an appeal from an order, a •stay or suspension can only be had- by an application to the court. The majority opinion places the jdaintiff in precisely the same position as though he .had asked for a' stay or suspension. The effect • of such a decision is to encourage loose practice. ■ If the defendant had appealed from the conditions as oppressive, without asking for .a stay or suspension, and had been defeated upon1 his appeal, he would certainly have lost his right to a new trial. He would not thereafter be permitted to fulfill conditions' which he had deliber
And now, without a suggestion of an excuse for the plaintiff’s failure to apply for a stay of suspension upon the appeal, the court wipes out both the fulfillment and the rejection, compels the defendant to fulfill over again, and gives the plaintiff the privilege of rejecting or accepting over again.
This seems to me to be purely arbitrary. Certainly no rule of law or practice has been found to sustain it, and it establishes a dangerous precedent.
Order modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, ■ without costs.