Dewandelaer v. Sawdey

63 A. 446, 78 Conn. 654, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 8, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 63 A. 446 (Dewandelaer v. Sawdey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dewandelaer v. Sawdey, 63 A. 446, 78 Conn. 654, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 94 (Colo. 1906).

Opinion

Hall, J.

The plaintiff brought an action for libel to the Superior Court in New Haven county on the first Tuesday of May, 1905, by a complaint signed by her attorney, M. J. Byrne, claiming $10,000 damages. There was filed a written withdrawal of the action, without costs in favor of either party, signed by the plaintiff and the defendant, which is indorsed as received by the clerk August 10th, 1905, and filed September 2d, 1905. On the 10th of the next October, at the next term of court, said attorney made a written application in his own name, asking that the case be restored to the docket. The application alleged that said attorney was retained by the plaintiff to bring and prosecute said action; that at the time of said employment the plaintiff informed said attorney “ that she was without means as aforesaid, and she did thereupon verbally assign to the subscriber so much of any judgment which might be obtained in said cause in her favor as would be necessary to compensate him for services rendered and disbursements made in her behalf in connection with said cause ”; that after commencing the action said attorney paid out and obligated himself to pay out about $825 for fees for the service of attachment processes and clerk fees, and is unable to recover anything from the plaintiff either for such expense incurred or for his own services ; that the defendant and the plaintiff “ for the fraudulent and wrongful purpose of cheating and defrauding the said Byrne as such attorney out' of his fees and disbursements above mentioned, and to hinder and prevent him from recovering the same, secretly and without the knowledge and consent of said Byrne, fraudulently and wrongfully settled and compromised said action between them, the defendant paying the plaintiff about $160, in full settlement of all *656 claims and demands in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant therein, . . . and it was thereupon agreed between them that said action should he withdrawn by the plaintiff without further costs to the defendant, and said action was thereupon withdrawn ”; that “ the defendant well knew- that the plaintiff had no property or visible means before and at the time when said settlement was made, and that the plaintiff was wholly unable to pay the said Byrne for his said costs and disbursements, or for his said services ”; that by means of the premises said Byrne will be deprived of all compensation for his services and expenses unless relieved by the interposition of said court. The application asked that the action be restored to the docket of the court so that it might be proceeded with according to law and be prosecuted so far as might be necessary to protect the applicant’s rights. The court denied said application.

The notice of appeal to this court is by the plaintiff, Mae DeWandelaer, her name being signed thereto “by M. J. Byrne, her attorney.”

The appeal itself, with the caption of the title of the action of libel, states that “ in the above entitled cause the plaintiff appeals,” etc., and is signed by “ M. J. Byrne, Attorney for plaintiff ”; and the appeal bond is conditioned that the said plaintiff shall prosecute said appeal to effect and pay all costs therein if she shall fail to do so.

The errors assigned in the appeal are : (1) in denying the motion of plaintiff’s attorney to have the case restored to the docket; (2) in refusing to hear evidence in substantiation of the averments of the motion, and in deciding the motion without giving the plaintiff’s attorney an opportunity to present such evidence; (3) and in assuming that by the withdrawal of the case the court was deprived of jurisdiction over it.

It does not appear from the record that the trial court held that it had not jurisdiction to grant the application.

Regarding the opportunity given the attorney to present evidence in support of the allegations of his application, the judgment-file, dated October 13th, 1905, states that on that *657 day “ the parties appeared, and were at issue to the court on said motion to restore said action to the docket,” and that “ the court having fully heard the parties on the issues raised on said motion to restore said action to the docket, denied said motion.” The trial judge afterward made a finding showing the facts proved and claims made at the hearing of said application, as follows: Michael J. Byrne acted as attorney for the plaintiff at the commencement of this action. After the action had been returned to court the plaintiff, acting in her own behalf, effected a settlement with the defendant and withdrew the case. Upon the hearing of a motion to restore the case to the docket* filed by said Byrne, it did not appear that he represented the plaintiff. “ Said Byrne represented to the court that the plaintiff had orally assigned to him, before the commencement of the suit, such a portion of the judgment to be thereafter rendered in her favor as would be necessary to cover his charge for legal services and his disbursements, and that he then appeared in court in support of said motion on his own behalf, for the purpose of protecting his rights under said assignment, and asked the court to fix a time for a hearing upon said motion, in order that he might have an opportunity to introduce evidence in proof of tbe allegations contained in the motion. Said Byrne claimed the right to a hearing on said motion, for the purpose of introducing evidence in proof of the allegations therein; also that the withdrawal of the case by the plaintiff did not deprive the court of jurisdiction to protect him in his rights under said assignment. The court overruled the claims of said Byrne in the form stated, and denied the motion.”

The claim of Byrne in the form in which it was stated, and which the court overruled, was that he was entitled to have a time fixed for a further hearing upon his application to restore the case to the docket to enable him to introduce evidence of the truth of the averments of the application, “ for the purpose of protecting his rights under said assignment.” It is not entirely clear whether the court overruled the claim upon the ground that Byrne should have been *658 prepared to present all his evidence on the day of the hearing of the motion, or upon the ground that the allegations of the application, and the statement of Mr. Byrne at the hearing, showed that he had no assignment, the protection of his rights under which entitled him to have the case restored to the docket.

Either ground would have been sufficient. If the court merely refused to further postpone the hearing upon the application, it does not appear that such action was an improper exercise of its discretionary power. On the other hand, the court was justified in holding that upon the allegations of the application, and the statement of Byrne himself, he had no assignment which entitled him to. have the case restored to the docket. It is not claimed that he took an assignment of the whole or any part of the plaintiff’s right of action against the defendant. The claimed assignment was of an undetermined part of a judgment which had no existence, and which might be recovered in an action not then commenced. It was at the most but an agreement which could take effect as an assignment only when the judgment came into existence. Schubert v. Herzberg, 65 Mo. App. 578.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A. 446, 78 Conn. 654, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewandelaer-v-sawdey-conn-1906.