213 A.D. 268 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1925
The plaintiff was injured through the negligence of the Coney Island and Brooklyn Railroad Company. The respondents commenced an action on his behalf. Thereafter Ruger Bros., another firm of attorneys, applied for an order vacating the summons and complaint served by the respondents, or in the alternative dismissing the action. It appearing that the action was commenced under the alleged authority of a written retainer signed by the plaintiff, the motion was denied, without prejudice to a motion for substitution
The respondents’ case rests chiefly upon the testimony of one Sagona, who procured the written retainer upon which the respondents rely. Also, no claim to the execution of a retainer is made except upon one authorized by the plaintiff almost immediately following his being brought to the hospital and signed by him that same afternoon. A reading of this record shows that the testimony of Sagona is brazenly and deliberately false in so many important particulars as to vitiate his testimony as to the procurement of the retainer, and to set aside a finding that the same was signed as a retainer by the plaintiff, on the ground that it was against the weight of the evidence. Sagona testified that his business was that of an investigator and that he was already at the hospital before the plaintiff arrived, investigating a similar case. The police blotter shows that the accident happened at one-forty. The plaintiff’s sister testified that she, came to the hospital to see her brother and that Sagona arrived about twenty minutes thereafter. According to the testimony of Sagona, he was at the bedside of the injured man at two o’clock. The doctor who brought the injured man to the hospital in the ambulance testified that he had seen him within almost an hour after the accident. The testimony of the doctor would not bring the injured man to the hospital until almost three o’clock; but whatever time the injured man reached the hospital, certain it is that Sagona was there and met him on his arrival or within a very few minutes thereafter. Sagona’s testimony as to how he met the injured man is that the sister came to the hospital and was “ a bit bewildered and did not know what was what, and talking in Italian and I simply volunteered to ask her what I could do for her,” and that she then asked Sagona to ask the doctor what the injuries were, in other words, to translate to her what happened to her brother. The testimony as to how Sagona came to meet the injured man, namely, through volunteering to help the sister, who could not speak in English, is false, for the reason that the sister appeared at the hearing and had no difficulty in testifying both on direct and cross-examination in English. Sagona further testified that
Sagona, on the other hand, testified that immediately following his authorization by the plaintiff he went downtown to the office of the respondents and obtained their form of retainer, and then went back to the home of the plaintiff, and that the retainer was signed close on to five o’clock. If the man was not injured" until one-forty and reached the hospital about three o’clock and the retainer was signed at five o’clock, during which time it is conceded that Sagona went to the home of the plaintiff and interviewed the plaintiff’s wife, and then took the sister and the nurse of the plaintiff’s wife back to the hospital and had the retainer signed, there would hardly be sufficient time for him to take the trip to the respondents’ office at 27 William street, Manhattan, since both the
It follows that the order appealed from should be reversed,
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Merrell and McAvoy, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs, and respondent’s lien vacated.