Coit v. . Campbell, Etc.

82 N.Y. 509, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 395
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 82 N.Y. 509 (Coit v. . Campbell, Etc.) 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
Coit v. . Campbell, Etc., 82 N.Y. 509, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 395 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

Both of the defendants having died, the plaintiff claims an absolute right to revive or continue this action on motion, by virtue of section 757 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1879, which reads as follows: “ Section 757. In case of the death of a sole plaintiff, or a sole defendant, if the cause of action survives or continues, the court must, upon a motion, ■ allow or compel the action to be continued by or against his representative or successor in interest.”

*512 The construction of this section, as applicable to equitable actions, to which class this action belongs, is involved in -the present appeal. The motion was denied on the ground of delay, and one question in the case is whether the court has power to deny the application on that ground, and if so, whether such power is regulated by any legal principle, or rests in the unrestricted discretion of the court.

It is evident that this is a question of considerable importance. To hold that the command of the statute is imperative, and that whatever length of time may have elapsed since the death of the party, the order to revive must be granted, would be contrary to established principles of equity and to the policy upon which our statutes of limitation are founded, while to hold that the subject is wholly within- the discretion of the court, and that any lapse of time which it may consider unreasonable, is a sufficient ground for refusing the order, would not only be contrary to the letter of the statute, but might lead to irremediable’injustice. By denying to a party a continuance or revivor of his action, his rights may be entirely lost, and if the order is purely discretionary, he is without remedy by appeal, unless, perhaps, in a gross case of abuse of discretion. There is no reason why the right of a party to continue or revive his action should be less protected by legal rules and by the privilege of appealing from an adverse decision, than his right to bring or maintain it.

Under the chancery system the remedy in case of the abatement of a suit in equity by death, was a bill of revivor. This bill the party had a right to file without applying to the court for leave, and it could be met by plea"or demurrer. There was no statute fixing the time within which it might be filed, nor indeed was there any statute of limitations in England applicable to the Court of Chancery. But loches and neglect were always discountenanced and, therefore, there was a limitation to suits in the Court of Chancery, and where Parliament had. limited the time of actions and remedies to a certain period, in legal proceedings, the Court of Chancery adopted this rule, and *513 applied it to similar cases in equity. (Angelí on Limitations, § 25; Smith v. Clay, 3 Bro. Ch. 639.) This principle was held applicable to bills of revivor, in Hollingshead's Case (1 P. Wms. 742), which was a bill for an account, and the revivor was applied for after decree. The Chancellor said: “ There can be no doubt but that if this were only a bill and answer, and the suit abated, the executor must bring his bill of revivor within six years, else the suit would be barred. ” (See, also, 2 Sch. & Lefroy 632.) In Story’s Equity Pleadings (§ 831), this case is cited, with others to the same effect, and the rule is there laid down that if a bill in equity be for an account or other personal demand, a plea that the suit has not been revived within six years since the abatement, will be a good bar; but that it must be alleged that six years have elapsed since the taking out of administration, for the bar does not begin to run until an administration is taken out. This last proposition was expressly decided in Perry v. Jenkins (1 Mylne & Craig. 122).

Under the Revised Statutes, the formality of a bill of revivor might be dispensed with, and the remedy obtained by petition, and under the former Code (§ 121), by motion, if made within one year, and by supplemental complaint after that time. In Beach v. Reynolds (53 N. Y. 1), it was held that, under that section, the right to revive an equity suit was not an absolute legal right, but rested in the legal discretion of the court, and that long delay was a valid reason for refusing the leave asked; but it must be observed that in that case the delay was twenty-two years. In Hercy v. Dinwoody (4 Bro. Ch. 257), cited in the opinion of the Supreme Court in Beach v. Reynolds at page 9, as an instance of the application of the doctrine of loches to a bill of revivor, the delay was twenty-six years. In Earl of Egremont v. Hamilton, the bill was filed in 1799 to obtain the benefit of a decree rendered in 1740, directing an accounting, the suit having abated in 1771. These were cases, it is true, of bills to revive after decree, but I have found no case in which a delay less than the term fixed by the statute of limitations for bringing the actions sought to be revived, has been *514 deemed sufficient cause for refusing the revivor, and although it is said, in general terms, that the question of delay is in the discretion of the court, yet it is a well-established principle of equity, that where there is a discretion to bar a right on the ground of delay, the courts will, in the exercise, of that discretion, use the statute of limitations as a rule to guide their action. (Mitford’s Equity Pleadings, 293, 318.) Of 'course this principle applies only to cases where the relief asked relates to a matter of right, and not to applications to the favor of the court, or for its indulgence in cases of default or excusable neglect. These cases are purely discretionary, and any loches which may to the courts seem sufficient, is cause for denying relief.

It is to be observed that Judge Allem in his opinion in Beach, v. Reynolds, cautiously uses the term legal discretion.” This refers to a discretion guided by some rule, and when the manner in which the discretion of a court of equity will be exercised in particular cases, has been settled by a long course of adjudication, it becomes a rule of equity applicable to similar cases subsequently arising.

All the various proceedings which have been from time to time authorized by statute, .for the purpose of reviving suits in equity, interrupted by the death of parties, are but substitutes for the old bill of revivor. They change merely the mode of procedure, but the right is always the same and should be governed by the same principles. In Washington Ins. Co. v. Slee (2 Paige, 368), the Chancellor expresses the opinion that the same objections which might be raised by plea, or demurrer to a bill of revivor, might be shown in opposition to a petition to revive under the statute, and it would seem to follow that a delay which would not be a bar to a bill of revivor, ought not to be a sufficient answer to a petition under the statute or a motion under the Code, and I regard all the authorities on the subject as recognizing, as a rule of equity, that the discretion of the court to refuse to revive a suit on the ground of delay, is to be guided by the statute of limitations applicable to the subject-matter of the suit. (Mitford’s Pleadings, 290; 2 Barb.

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82 N.Y. 509, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coit-v-campbell-etc-ny-1880.