City of New York v. . Baird

68 N.E. 364, 176 N.Y. 269, 14 Bedell 269, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 799
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 20, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 68 N.E. 364 (City of New York v. . Baird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of New York v. . Baird, 68 N.E. 364, 176 N.Y. 269, 14 Bedell 269, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 799 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

The recovery is on a bond given by defendants as principal and surety conditioned for the payment and satisfaction of any judgment which may be obtained in an action brought by one Kelly against the city of New York.

Defendants insist that the recovery ought not to stand because (1) as to defendant Baird the city, without right, made a settlement with Kelly and caused the judgment to be satisfied as to it against the protest of Baird, who insisted that an appeal taken by the city and himself was well taken, and should be prosecuted to the end; and (2) as to the surety company, that it was entitled to notice of the settlement and the consequent opportunity to take the city’s place and prosecute the appeal.

The execution and delivery of the bond upon which this action is founded was induced by these circumstances : Baird had a contract with the city of New York for laying water mains, one of the provisions of which was that he would indemnify and save harmless the city of New York against *273 and from all suits and actions and all costs and damages to which the city might be put for, or on account of any injury, or alleged injury, to the person or property of another resulting from negligence in the performance of the work or in guarding the same. During the progress of the work Kelly, a member of the fire department, drove his engine into some part of the excavation. It was in the night time and he claimed there were no lights to warn him of the danger. His injuries were very serious and very j>romptly he commenced an action against the contractor, Baird, and the city of Hew York, the liability of the latter resting upon its duty to keep the public highway in a safe condition for travel while the work was in progress, and its failure to guard the street and ditch. (Deming v. Terminal Ry. of Buffalo, 169 N. Y. 1.) Before that action came on for trial Baird, having completed his contract, sought to obtain from the comptroller the balance of the contract price, which exceeded the sum of $25,000. But the comptroller claiming, as he lawfully might, that the provisions in the contract to which brief reference-has been made enured to the benefit of the city, and entitled it to retain sufficient of the moneys due the contractor to indemnify it against any claim made against it by reason of the contractor’s negligence (Mansfield v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y., 165 N. Y. 208), refused to pay over such balance, negotiations on this subject resulted in a consent by the municipal authorities to accept a bond with a surety company as surety for $10,000 conditioned, as has already been noted, for the payment of any judgment to be obtained in the action, upon the giving of which the municipal authorities paid over the $25,000 to Baird.

The trial of Kelly’s action, however, disclosed that the jury took a very different view of the extent of the injuries received by Kelly from that taken by Baird and the representatives of the municipality, for their verdict exceeded $22,000.

After the entry of judgment an appeal was taken by Baird and the city. Some months later, and while the appeals were pending undisposed of, the city made a settlement with Kelly by which it secured a reduction of the judgment as against it *274 by something more than §5,000. The city having paid §7,500 in excess of the amount secured by the bond then brought this action.

Baird and his surety insist that the city having taken an appeal was bound to prosecute it to the end, although the result to the city might be a very substantial loss, while the view of the city authorities seems to be that the city owed no duty whatever either to the principal or his surety in the bond and, therefore, could accept as final any judgment rendered in that action no matter how excessive the damages or how many the substantial errors of law committed by the trial court. But the view-point of each is partial and quite too narrow we think, and for 'that reason, doubtless, is unsupported by authority.

In Conner v. Reeves (103 N. Y. 527) the question ivas neither presented by the record nor discussed by the counsel or the court whether an indemnity can be availed of by one depriving the indemnitor of such rights of appeal as the' statute undertakes to secure to all litigants. Nor was such a question presented in Wheeler v. Sweet (137 N. Y. 435), although a very interesting question "was decided, namely, that while a judgment against a sheriff obtained in due course ordinarily fixes the liability of the indemnitors, although not parties and without notice of the action, at the same time good faith requires the sheriff, if requested, to give the indemnitors an opportunity to present a defense, and if this is refused, or prevented by his act, he may not say that the indemnitors have not been injured or that the judgment determines their liability. The proposition decided was no more to be found in that bond than in this one, but it was read into it by the court, and furnished a precedent of which many more could be found for a like reading in this case if justice will be thereby promoted.

The excuse offered by the city authorities for changing their position after taking an appeal is that Kelly’s counsel came to them with an offer of compromise, and while the learned assistant corporation counsel was of the opinion that- a *275 reversal would quite likely result from the appeal, his view was that the reversal would be on technical grounds which would not at all stand in the way of a submission of the case to a jury on a new trial, and it was his judgment that as large and possibly a larger verdict wmuld result. Therefore, he deemed it his duty in behalf of the city to secure a settlement which would reduce the amount to be paid as much as possible, and he secured a settlement by the terms of which the city paid something like $5,000 less than the amount of the judgment against it.

This $5,000 reduction did. not, however, benefit Baird. The city took care of itself and let Baird go, although the record tends to show that not only did the city have this $10,000 bond, but it also had a bond given by Baird when he entered into the contract, which covenanted for faithful performance of all the conditions of the contract, and against the sureties upon that bond it seems the city has also proceeded. If that bond is good — and the record contains no hint to the contrary — the reason assigned by counsel for securing a reduction of the judgment so far as the city is concerned seems inadequate and it becomes very difficult, therefore, to understand why it was insisted that the city should settle against the protest of Bail’d, who asserted persistently his anxiety to have the judgment reviewed by the appellate court. Baird’s counsel says under oath that he protested against it with all possible vigor, and in that respect he is not contradicted by the assistant corporation counsel, who seems to have heen equally determined that so far as the city was concerned the judgment should be compromised.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.E. 364, 176 N.Y. 269, 14 Bedell 269, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-york-v-baird-ny-1903.