Associated Sales Analysts, Inc. v. Weitz

25 A.D.2d 64, 266 N.Y.S.2d 852, 1966 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5001
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 8, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 A.D.2d 64 (Associated Sales Analysts, Inc. v. Weitz) 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
Associated Sales Analysts, Inc. v. Weitz, 25 A.D.2d 64, 266 N.Y.S.2d 852, 1966 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5001 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

Breitel, J.

The issue is whether two subsequent actions may as a matter of power, and should in the exercise of discretion, be stayed for nonpayment of a bill of costs imposed in a prior action brought by plaintiff’s assignor against defendant Weitz. He is the sole defendant in one of the subsequent actions and is only one of several defendants in the other. Plaintiff had succeeded in the prior action on the trial and in this court (19 A D 2d 174, affg. 39 Misc 2d 262); but the Court of Appeals reversed and dismissed the complaint (13 N Y 2d 267). Two questions are involved: first, whether CPLB has changed the common-law rule as to such stays, and, second, whether there is a sufficient similarity between the two subsequent actions and the prior action to warrant a discretionary stay.

Special Term granted the stays and plaintiff appeals. The orders on the consolidated appeals should be modified in the multiple defendant tort action to limit the stay to proceedings against defendant Weitz and both orders should otherwise be affirmed.

Under section 1520 of the old Civil Practice Act the nonpayment of motion and other interlocutory costs subjected the nonpayer to an automatic stay in the action. The section had been derived from the Code of Civil Procedure, and practice codes before that. Its history is excellently detailed in Matter [66]*66of Friedman (166 Misc. 664, Wingate, S.). But, as pointed out in the Friedman case, the discretionary power to stay actions for nonpayment of costs in prior actions had an older common-law origin (2 Bacon’s Abridgement [1860 Amer. od.] 535; 20 C. J. S., Costs, § 426). It was out of that conunon-law or judicial power that the more limited and automatic statutory stay was carved (Matter of Friedman, supra, pp. 667-669; Barton v. Speis, 73 N. Y. 133; Wilner v. Independent Order Ahawas Israel, 122 App. Div. 615, 616; Behrens v. Sturges, 138 App. Div. 537, 538-539).

The stay provision of section 1520 was omitted, when its principal portion was carried into CPLR 5101. The CPLR legislative history, however, is unclear whether the intention with respect to stays to enforce payment of costs extended to the common-law power to stay subsequent actions as distinguished from stays within the same action for nonpayment of interlocutory costs. The Third Preliminary Report of the Advisory Committee (N. Y. Legis. Doe., 1959, No. 17, p. 226) stated that “ The portions of section 1520 relating to a stay of proceedings * * * will be treated in the proposed provisions governing costs.” The Fourth Report (N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1960, No. 20, p. 226) stated that the cost provision of section 1520 would be omitted in CPLR because, it is said, unlimited execution is now available and motion costs involve only nominal sums seldom collected. The matter is never again referred to in the Fifth and Sixth subsequent reports (N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1961, No. 15; N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1962, No. 8). The Weinstein-Korn-Miller treatise refers to the stay provision in the old statute, pointing out that the 10-day stay and the limitation of the execution to personal property have been dropped, and adding that with unlimited execution available a stay of proceedings is entirely unwarranted (5 N. Y. Civ. Prac., pars. 5101.06-5101.07). C'armody-Wait (23 N. Y. Practice, §§ 302, 303, 304) in its 1965 pocket supplement evidently infers that the elimination of the section 1520 stay had also worked a. nullification of the old common-law power to stay actions for nonpayment of costs in a prior action, a matter apparently never discussed anywhere before in the reported several drafting phases of CPLR.

This incomplete legislative history is insufficient to permit inference of a legislative nullification of the common-law or judicial power to stay actions. On the contrary, in the light of the history of the common-law power and the reports of the Advisory Committees for CPLR treating exclusively with interlocutory costs, no such nullification should be implied. As a [67]*67matter of policy and practicality, the stay is warranted because executions may be unsatisfiable (for that matter for interlocutory costs, too) and yet an irresponsible litigant might continue to harass his adversary with multiple 'actions (e.g., Barton v. Speis, 73 N. Y. 133, supra; Wilner v. Independent Order Ahawas Israel, 122 App. Div. 615, 616, supra; Behrens v. Sturges, 138 App. Div. 537, 538-539, supra; Matter of Friedman, 166 Misc. 664, 667, supra). Notable, too, is the evident fact that a judgment for costs in a prior action was always enforcible by unlimited execution like any other judgment, and yet the power to stay existed and was exercised. Consequently, it is concluded that the discretionary judicial power to stay for nonpayment of costs in prior actions still exists and should continue.

In describing the common-law power to stay subsequent actions for nonpayment of costs in prior actions it has been characterized as a discretionary power. This is true not only in this State but in others (see Inability to Pay Costs — Second Action, Ann. 156 A. L. R. 956; 20 C. J. S., Costs, § 426, subd. [c]). There is no doubt that the plaintiff in the subsequent action may show extraordinary circumstances to merit withholding of a stay. To some extent the merits of the case, the impecunious status of the litigant, and perhaps other circumstances, may move or deter the exercise of discretion (156 A. L. R. 956, supra, osp. New York cases- cited at pp. 963-965). Over-all factors always present are, first, that a litigant has a duty to obey a judgment of the court, even if only in a prior action arising out of the same fact complex for the same or a similar wrong, and second, preventing harassing litigation for its own sake. In the instant cases there is a showing of arguable merit but no evidence of hardship if the prior judgment for costs were obeyed (cf. Schwartz v. Minsker Realty Co., 166 App. Div. 681). Impecuniousness alone is not enough (ibid.; Wilner v. Independent Order Ahawas Israel, supra). But surely, just by way of example, impecuniousness caused by the wrong alleged would cast the matter in a different light (Merchants’ Credit Clearing House Assn. v. Dennis, 143 App. Div. 170).

That plaintiff is an assignee of the plaintiff in the prior action who sustained the judgment for costs prior to the assignment, or that there was some difference in added parties, does not avoid the power to stay (Barton v. Speis, supra; Spaulding v. American Wood Bd. Co., 58 App. Div. 314).

There remains only the question of the similarity of actions required to support the granting of a stay. Plaintiff has argued that there must be an identity of causes of action between prior [68]*68and subsequent actions before a stay would be warranted. Where the prior judgment is on the merits, and in a limited sense where it is not on the merits, the stay would serve no useful purpose if identity of cause of action were the standard. The defense of res judicata, at least when a hearing is not required, would be the basis for terminating the action rather than prolonging its life in suspension by the device of a stay. But to be sure, there has been loose language in the cases referring to the sameness, and even identity, of the causes of action.

Thus, in the Barton case (supra),

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25 A.D.2d 64, 266 N.Y.S.2d 852, 1966 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associated-sales-analysts-inc-v-weitz-nyappdiv-1966.