199 A.D. 74 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
Section 1273 of the Code of Civil Procedure prescribes that “ a judgment by confession may be entered, without action, * * * as prescribed in this article.” Section 1274 reads: “ A written statement must be made, and signed by the defendant, to the following effect.” Then follow the provisions as to what the statement must contain. The section then reads: " The statement must be verified by the oath of the defendant, to the effect, that the matters of fact therein set forth are true.” Section 1275 provides: “ At any time within three years after the statement is verified, it may be filed with the county clerk of the county of which the defendant was a resident at the time of making such statement.” The section then provides that the clerk must thereupon enter judgment, etc. These sections are a re-enactment of sections 382, 383 and 384 of the Code of Procedure, in substance.
Since the Code of Procedure went into effect there has never been a case reported in this State, that we have been able to find, where a judgment was entered by confession under a power of attorney except the case of Allen v. Smillie (12 How. Pr. 156). In that case the power of attorney was executed before the Code of Procedure went into effect.
We have been unable to find a case which states that a judgment by confession may be entered in this State under a power of attorney since the Code of Civil Procedure went into effect except the case of Teel v. Yost (128 N. Y. 387). The statement of Chief Judge Huger in that case was obiter dicta, and if he meant to say that at that time a judgment by confession could be entered under a power of attorney, his statement has not been adopted as a correct statement of the law of the State upon that point by any subsequent decision which has been reported' and it has not been so understood by the members of the profession.
The only authority for entering a judgment by confession which existed in this State at the time the judgment in question was entered was contained in the provisions of the Code of
All concur.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.