Whitelegge v. De Witt

12 Daly 319 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1884

Vast Hoesen, J.

The judge properly ruled that the bill of costs, as taxed, is not to be regarded as the measure of compensation between attorney and client (Stow v. Hamlin, 11 How. Pr. 452). The relations between attorney and client are carefully considered in the leading case of Ward v. Syme (9 How. Pr. 16), as well as in Rooney v. Second Avenue R. R. Co. (18 N. Y. 368), and those cases leave no room for doubt that in the State of New York, since the old fee bill was abolished, an attorney is not compelled to labor for the amounts awarded as costs to the prevailing party, but is entitled to recover the reasonable value of his services: a fact to be established, like any other fact, by evidence ( Carr v, Mairet, 1 Hilt. 498 ; Callup v. Rerue, 10 Hun 526, and cases there cited).

The judge correctly ruled that a motion to vacate the attachment could properly be made by the defendant in the action, notwithstanding that a third person claimed the property attached as his own, and the plaintiff had thereupon given an indemnity bond to the sheriff to protect him against the claim of the claimant. Section 682 gives to the defendant the right to apply for the modification or the vacation of the attachment at any time before the actual application of the attached property to the payment of the judgment. The proceeding under section 682 is not inconsistent with the proceedings provided for by sections 657, 658, and 659. The cases on which the appellant relies, *322Chamberlain v. Beller (18 N. Y. 115), and The People v. Schuyler (5 Barb. 166), do not, as he supposes, conflict with the practice as stated by the trial judge.

The learned counsel for the plaintiff is mistaken in saying that there is no evidence in the case that De Witt lost anything by the vacatur of the attachment. The testimony is that the property attached was of the value of $332.25, and that when the attachment was vacated the property was returned to Roche, the defendant in the attachment suit, and that an execution against Roche was returned unsatisfied. This leaves no room for doubt that De Witt did suffer loss by the dissolution of the attachment.

There can be no doubt that in an action to recover the value of services rendered, the defendant may counterclaim for injuries received by him from the plaintiff’s negligence in doing the work. This proposition requires no citation of authorities, but the case of Isham v. Davidson (52 N. Y. 237) is' in point as to the right to set up a counterclaim for damages arising from a tort connected with the contract that is the subject of the action. The case of Clapp v. Wright (21 Hun 240) does not touch the point at all, for in that case the defendant, in an action for services, attempted to plead as a counterclaim a claim for a penalty to which he alleged that the plaintiff had become liable in a matter nowise connected with the plaintiff’s cause of action.

In this court we cannot consider any errors in the charge to which exception was not taken at the trial. On appeals from the citjr court we review nothing but exceptions (Standard Oil Co. v. Amazon Ins. Co., 79 N. Y. 506).

There is one exception, however, that seems to be well taken. The judge instructed the jury that in no event could the plaintiff recover for services that would not have been required if the order vacating the attachment had not been made. This instruction assumed that the vacation of the attachment was caused by the plaintiff’s negligence, for in no other way than by his own fault could the plaintiff be debarred from recovering compensation for services rendered by him in the action. It was proved that on a *323rehearing the order vacating the attachment was itself vacated, and that the attachment was reintegrated, though the property had been eloigned. An oversight of the judge' may have led to the discharge of the attachment, and unless the plaintiff were guilty of negligence, his services in procuring the reinstatement of the attachment should not go unrewarded. If-the judge held to the contrary he erred, and if his -notions of the law corresponded with those I have expressed, he must have assumed that the negligence of the plaintiff had been so conclusively proved that it was not to be submitted as a question to the jury.

For the purpose of removing one point from the controversies that may arise on a new trial, I will say that there is no force in the plaintiff’s suggestion that the defendant could not recoup her damages from any part of his demand except his claim for services in obtaining the attachment.

If the trial judge should be of the opinion of the General Term of the city court that no negligence was proved, the case would present a very simple issue for the jury to decide.

Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs of the appeal to this court to the appellant to abide the event.

Van Bkunt and J. F. Daly, JJ., concurred. •

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs of appeal to appellant to abide event.

At the same time was heard an appeal by plaintiff from an order of the General Term of the Marine Court, affirming an order of that court denying a motion for a re-taxation of costs, upon which appeal the following opinion was rendered.

Van Hoesen, J.

The plaintiff is not entitled to costs, though no recovery was had upon the counterclaim (Thayer v. Holland, 63 How. Pr. 179). As the plaintiff failed to *324establish his right to recover, the defendant, though she did not establish her counterclaim, is the prevailing party. Section 3234 has no application to this case; but if it had, the last sentence of the section, taken in connection with the last sentence of section 3228, would completely answer the plaintiff’s claim to costs upon the counterclaim.

The taxation of costs is unquestionably right.

It is unnecessary to consider the matter at length, inasmuch as the law is, in this court, well settled. We never took the view of the law that prevailed in Union Trust Co. v. Whiton (17 Hun 593), but have uniformly adopted the practice which the Court of Appeals, in First National Bank v. Fourth National Bank (1 Civ. Pro. Rep. 318), declared to be correct. See Mott v. Consumers’ Fee Co. (8 Daly 244), where, in 1879, Chief Justice Daly decided that the true' rule was the one which, in 1881, the Court of Appeals expressly sanctioned.

Van Brunt and J. F. Daly, JJ., concurred.

Order affirmed, with costs.

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