1 Cole. & Cai. Cas. 137 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1800
Both services cannot be good; wherever there is an attorney retained* the service must be on him ; therefore, the service on Eden himself was irregular, but the service on the attorney’s brother being in his office, waá good. Lansing, Ch. J. and Lewis, J. were of opinion, that the attorney in this case being constituted only an attorney to confess judgment, his authority expired with that act, and therefore, he could no longer be considered as attorney in the suit, but they both agreed that the service on Eden was well made.
B. Livingston then, before the counsel for the Bank proceeded in the argument, read counter
The counsel for the Bank contended, that in this transaction a fraud had been practised between Eden and Wardell, on the Bank, by entering up the satisfaction after notice, which must have been done to defeat the lien which the judgment had given the Bank upon Eden’s real estate. They now, therefore, appeared before the court for the purpose of getting that entry of satisfaction vacated, and strongly insisted, 1st. That the entry of satisfaction was irregular, because it was done by the party himself, and not by his attorney. They said, that although by statute a party might possibly “ appear, prosecute, defend, &c. in person,” yet that after he had once made an election to appear by attorney, he could not be known in the suit in person. 2d. That notwithstanding the form of pleadings was still preserved, and suits are still instituted in the names of obligees, yet that courts of law will always take notice of the rights of assignees, and protect them from injury, so that substantial justice shall be done between the parties. To show that this had been done, and to what length courts of law have gone, they cited 1 Durn. & East, 619. 4 id. 340. And to show that the court may interpose in this summary way, and lay their hands at once on the judgment, without turning the applicants round to a court of chancery, they cited Fin. Abr. tit. Judgment, letter K. a. 633, 4, 5, 6. Or if there should arise any doubts about the facts alleged, the court might, on this motion, direct an issue. 1. Wils. 331. Sayer, 253. Barnes’ Notes, 136.
They said that this was a novel way of bringing up such a question, and that really neither of the parties to the suit were in court. But they insisted,. 1, That it was perfectly regular for the party to enter up the satisfaction himself, and denied that it was either the province or the duty of the attorney to do it; that the very form of his warrant showed this, for being merely to prosecute and defend, the entering up. satisfaction of the judgment could not be considered-as being comprised within his powers. 1 Sellon’$ Frac. 14. Sayer’s Reports, 217. 2 H. Black. 608. They said that by the practice of courts, warrants of attorney are in force for one year and a day, for the sole purpose of enabling the attorney to sue out execution. Bac. Abr. 299. that the general warrant of attorney only extends to judgment and execution, and that there ought to be a special warrant made out for the purpose of authorising an attorney to enter satisfaction, which might be made to the attorney who had conducted the suit, or to any other. Sir Thos. Raymond, 69. 1 Cromp. Prac. 378. Sellon, 546. Impey, 408. They observed, that the doctrine contended for on the other side, viz, that all acts, re- / fating to a suit after it was instituted, must be done by the attorney, could not be true, inasmuch as it was settled law that a retraxit must be always entered by the party himself, and could never be done by attorney. 2 Sellon, 338- 3 Salk. 245. 8 Mod. Rep. 58. 3 Black. Com. 296.
As to the second point that courts of law will always take notice of the rights of assignees, they*
Harison and Hamilton, in reply, said, this was the only way that the plaintiffs had to secure the property from being placed entirely beyond their reach, and that although a scire facias should be brought, as suggested on the other side, yet that they could have no security for satisfaction of their judgment in the event of their recovering one. That as to the instance of a netraxit which had been cited as militating with the principle they contended for, it did not apply, for the attorney is to prosecute the suit for the ends of obtaining satisfaction, but a retraxit is not a prosecution for such end ; it is entering a bar to the suit without having received satisfaction. That it is important that attornies should make the entry of satisfaction, as it would guard the court against fraud, for the court can always know its own officers, but cannot be supposed to know the party. They denied the position that courts of law could vacate judgments for irregularity only, and relied, upon the case of the quare impedit cited from Finer, where a judgment was vacated on the ground of fraud; not, they admit
On the last day of term, Benson, J. delivered the following order, as the opinion of a majority of the court; Lansing, Ch. J. and Lewis, J. dissenting.
“ On reading and filing the affidavit of Martin 8. 5£ Wilkins, and the papers thereunto annexed, on the ££ part of the President, Directors and Company of the “ Bank of New- York, claiming to be assignees of the ££ judgment in this cause, and the affidavit of the “ said Joseph Eden, and the papers thereunto annex- “ ed on the part of the said Joseph Eden :
“ Ordered, That a vacatur of the entry of satisfac- “ tian of the said judgment be entered on the record7,