Chamberlain v. Lindsay

4 Thomp. & Cook 23, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 231
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Thomp. & Cook 23 (Chamberlain v. Lindsay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chamberlain v. Lindsay, 4 Thomp. & Cook 23, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 231 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Daniels, J.

According to the notice of motion, on which the order appealed from was made, the application for a new trial was restricted to the grounds of surprise and newly-discovered evidence; for, although it was added that the motion would also be made on other grounds stated, no mention of them was made in the notice.

The court, at the special term, appears to have taken that view of the application; for, by the terms of the order, it was the motion for a new trial on the grounds of surprise and newly-discovered evidence, which was granted. The merits of the case are, therefore, not strictly before the court on the present appeal, farther than their consideration may prove incidental in the examination of the reasons existing for the support of the order. Both parties to the action were admitted to be British-born subjects. The plaintiffs were engaged in business as merchants in Manchester, England, and, during November and December, 1869, the defendants were engaged as merchants, carrying on business in New York and in England. The debts in controversy were contracted and payable in England. Upon this state of facts, the parties, as to the transactions involved in this action, were subject to the laws of that country, so far as proceedings affecting the demands were taken there. 2 Kent’s Com. 459, marg. paging; Story’s Conflict of Laws, §§ 335, 338, 340.

During the latter part of the year 1869, a composition deed was executed by the debtors, and assented to and approved by the requisite number and amount of théir creditors, which, by the terms of [26]*26the English bankrupt laws then in force, effected their discharge from their debts, upon compliance with the terms and provisions of the law under which it was entered into.

These terms and provisions appeared to have been all complied with, excepting the one requiring, the deed to be. produced and left at the office of the chief registrar, for the purpose of being registered within twenty-eight days from the date of its execution by the debtor. Whether that was done within the time prescribed, was apparently the point on which the cause was finally disposed of at the trial. For as the deed could be, and was, executed by one of the debtors by means of a power of attorney, that cannot be regarded as a defect in the defendants’ defense, on which they could have been properly or probably defeated. Re Fulcher, 1 Ch. App. Cas. 519.

The deed itself was dated on the 3d of December, 1869, and it was registered, as the law required it to be, on the 30th of that month. So that, on the face of the paper, the law seemed to have been literally complied with in that respect. But before the trial took place, the debtor, who in person executed the deed, was examined as a witness in the case at the instance of the plaintiffs, and without his attention being in any manner directed to the precise time when the deed was executed, testified that .he left England for New York on the 27th day of November, 1869. This circumstance rendered it at once apparent that he could not have executed the deed on the 3d day of December, the day of its date, but must have done it on or before the 27th of November. No inquiry was made for. an explanation of this circumstance, nor was the attention of the witness, in any manner," directed to its existence, and the fact itself seems to have escaped the observation of the defendants’ attorney and counsel. It plainly might have been discovered by a reasonable degree of attention to the evidence given by the witness, in view of the date appearing upon the face of the deed. And for that reason, if the application had proceeded solely upon that ground, the omission to devote that degree of attention to the case, before the trial was brought on, would have formed a complete answer to it.

Parties to legal proceedings are required to use attention and diligence in the proper preparation of their causes for trial; and if either fails to do that, and, consequently, is defeated when he might otherwise have succeeded, the fault is his own, for which the courts [27]*27can ordinarily supply no remedy. But it is claimed, by the defendants’ attorneys and counsel, that they were prevented from discovering this discrepancy between the statements of the witness and the date of the deed, by assurances received from the plaintiffs’ counsel, which induced them to anticipate an entirely different objection to the defense made under the composition deed. And sufficient reason is disclosed by the affidavits used upon the application, to warrant the conclusion that such was the case. It is not supposed that the plaintiffs’ counsel really designed to deceive the attorney for the defendants with whom their interviews were held. But it is quite apparent that they designed to respond to his inquiries, as to the position they intended to take by way of answer to the defense, in such a manner as would not be likely to disclose the real defect they had then discovered to exist. They had the undoubted right not to respond at all, for it was no part of their duty to disclose the precise course which they designed to take in the trial of the cause, or the reason on which they would endeavor to recover a verdict for the indebtedness sued upon. But when they waived that, and undertook to respond to the inquiries made, it should have been done in such a manner, as not to leave a palpably erroneous impression on the mind of the person making them.

When the stipulation was made, agreeing upon certain evidence to be given on the trial, one of the attorneys for the defendants inquired of one of the plaintiffs’ counsel what they relied on in opposition to the deed, or what their point was in the case. And the reply was made by asking the question, What effect do you suppose the English bankruptcy law has on American debtors ?”

The ordinary effect of such an interview would be to produce the conclusion, that the legal effect, alone, of the proceedings under the bankrupt law was to be rendered the subject of contest at the trial.

It was calculated to lure the attorney, particularly if he was apt to be confiding as to his adversary’s statements, into the belief that no formal omissions existed in the documents relied upon by the defendants as their defense. And it was not unreasonable that the trial should be undertaken with that expectation existing on the part of the defendants. The natural course to be taken would be to prepare and fortify the defense, so far as that objection required it to be done, and devote no particular attention to it in other respects.

Upon another occasion, preceding the trial, when an application was made by the defendants’ counsel, to dismiss the case from the [28]*28calendar of short causes, one of the plaintiffs’ counsel stated, by way of answer to it, “ that he believed the case would turn only on questions of law, and that the facts were not in dispute.” And yet the fact required for the proper presentation of the questions of law, which was found to be controlling in the case, was one which did require to be proved, and it was proved by the deposition of one of the defendants.

The trial was opened, and proceeded in such a manner as to indicate the existence of care in avoiding all disturbance of the conviction abiding in the minds of the defendants’ attorneys. And it was not until the case was in a condition to be finally disposed of, that their minds were enlightened upon the real point in controversy in the action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Thomp. & Cook 23, 8 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-lindsay-nysupct-1874.