Abbett v. Blohm

54 A.D. 422
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 A.D. 422 (Abbett v. Blohm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbett v. Blohm, 54 A.D. 422 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

The judgment sought to be assailed was entered upon the 24th day of February, 1891, and the order to show cause why it should not be vacated was .dated April 7, 1900, and the order vacating it was entered on the 11th day of June, 1900. The ground of the motion was that the defendant Emma A. Blohm had never been personally served with the summons and complaint and did not authorize the attorneys to appear for her. The action against the defendant and her brother was for'legal services rendered, by the firm of Abbett & Fuller during the years 1885 and 1886; and it is conceded that the summons and complaint were duly served upon the brother in the .month of May,. 1888 ; that thereafter a notice [423]*423of appearance was given by Messrs. Hurd & Grim lor both defendants, and an answer was interposed which was verified by the brother. In February, 1891, the case having been reached upon the «alendar, upon default of the defendants an inquest was taken and judgment was entered against them.

In addition to swearing that she was never served with the summons and complaint, the defendant alleges that she neither retained nor authorized any attorney to appear for her; that the appearance of Messrs. .Hurd & Grim was without her authority, knowledge or consent, and that she never had any knowledge of the action or the judgment till March, 1900, when, having made a contract to sell some property which she had in the borough of Brooklyn, the judgment was disclosed in the course of an examination of title upon a search made by a title company.

In her affidavit the defendant says: “Deponent does not intend to criticise the action of Messrs. Hurd & Grim in serving the notice of appearance and answer for her, as she is fully aware that they would never intentionally exceed their authority, as no firm practicing in the city of Hew York stood higher than they, but deponent believes that the summons and complaint herein, was served upon her brother, Charles A. Blohm, and upon him only, and that he, without her knowledge, consent or authority, went to Messrs. Hurd & Grim and requested them to appear for both, and that they, knowing the said Charles A. Blohm and knowing that deponent was his sister, naturally believed that he was authorized to make such request,' and for this reason served the notice of appearance and answer in her behalf.” She further states that she has not been on friendly terms with her brother since the year 1886.

Her affidavit is supplemented by one showing the entryf in the register of the attorneys who appeared in the action, and Mr. Grim, one of them, avers: “ That deponent’s firm was retained by the defendant Charles A. Blohm, to appear for both defendants; that deponent’s firm was not personally retained by Emma A. Blohm, nor was she seen or any transaction had with her, but that all matters pertaining to this action were transacted through the defendant Charles A. Blohm.” This latter affidavit is to be construed in the light of one subsequently made by Mr. Grim, in which he says: “ I do not wish to be understood by the affidavit so made that my [424]*424firm of Hurd & Grim had no 'authority to appear' in the action for Emma A. Blohm, on the contrary, my firm would not have appeared for her unless there was some authorization by her. We were authorized by her in some way to appear for her, but 4 do not remember the details.”

• ITpon the question of the extent of the brother’s authority to retain lawyers for the defendant, there is submitted a counter .affi-davit showing that in two actions brought prior to the one here involved, and wherein she and her brother were also defendants, the latter employed attorneys to appear for her, and his authority in those .actions is not disputed, Serious doubt is thus created as to whether the brother was entirely without power to authorize the appearance for her; but, if we pass that question and assume that she conferred upon him no such right, and that the appearance was unauthorized, the question .is then presented Avhether, upon the other facts shown, the motion to vacate the judgment should, at this, late day, have been granted.

We Avill further assume favorably to defendant that laches are not to be imputed to her. But it is made to appear by the years Avhich have elapsed since the-judgment was entered, during which both of the senior members of the firm of Abbett & Fuller have, died, and their books have been destroyed; that the effect of setting aside, the- judgment would be to prevent any -recovery, even though a just claim existed against her, not alone because the evi-. dence could not now be procured, but also'because the Statute of Limitations Avould be a bar. And it is admitted that the attorneys. who appeared for the defendant are reputable and responsible lawyers, both of whom are still living and can respond should she be able to prove that they put in an appearance for her without authority.

The question we are thus called upon to determine is neither new nor unsettled, for in a long line of cases the rule to be applied,, though. sometimes criticised,, has been firmly adhered to so far as domestic judgments are concerned, and in the Encyclopaedia of Pleading and Practice (Vol. 2, p. 685) a copious list of authorities.is: given and a summary of them is thus .stated: Taking some early English cases as their guide, they hold that an appearance by attorney, whether for the plaintiff or the defendant, if there' be no [425]*425collusion, may be recognized by the adverse party as.authentic and valid; that when an attorney takes upon himself to appear, the court, in case of a domestic judgment, looks no further, but proceeds as if the attorney had sufficient authority and leaves the party to his action against such attorney if he is financially responsible. * * And the rule that in the case of a .strictly domestic judgment a party not served, but for whom an unauthorized appearance was entered by an attorney, may not on these grounds assail the judgment for want of jurisdiction, when it comes in question collaterally, does not apply where the party was at all times a nonresident and out of the jurisdiction; the court may on motion in the action grant relief either by setting aside the judgment or by staying proceedings and permitting the party to come in and defend.” The leading case in this State of Denton v. Noyes (6 Johns. 297) is thus summarized in Vilas v. Plattsburgh & Montreal R. R. Co. (123 N. Y. 441), “ that a domestic judgment rendered by a court of general jurisdiction, against a party who had not been served with process, but for whom an attorney of the court had appeared, though, without authority, was neither void nor irregular. The doctrine of the prevailing opinion in that case encountered a vigorous opposition from one of the judges at the. time, and it is not too much to- - say that the reasoning upon which it rests has frequently been criticised by judges, and the justice of the rule denied. But it has been followed and must be regarded as the law of the State. (Hamilton v. Wright, 37 N. Y. 502; Brown v. Nichols, 42 id. 26.)”

In Vilas v. Plattsburgh & Montreal R. R. Co. (supra), after reviewing the authorities, the court observed: “We are bound, under our decisions, to follow the doctrine of Denton v. Noyes in cases where it is strictly applicable. It is as to such cases stare decisis.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A.D. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbett-v-blohm-nyappdiv-1900.