Durand v. . Hankerson

39 N.Y. 287, 7 Trans. App. 184
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 N.Y. 287 (Durand v. . Hankerson) 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
Durand v. . Hankerson, 39 N.Y. 287, 7 Trans. App. 184 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

The judgment herein Js claimed to be erroneous upon two grounds: First, that every fact alleged in the complaint, which constituted any ground for making the Appellant Hanker-son a Defendant, is untrue, and so found by the Referee, and all the relief which is asked in the complaint against the Appellant is denied. He should, therefore, have been dismissed with costs. Second, that no decree requiring him to pay the bond and mortgage to the receiver herein was proper : first, because there was nothing in the complaint to apprise him that the action was brought for any such purpose, or to put him to a denial of James Arnold’s title thereto; and, second, because Hiram Arnold, the reputed assignee, who has the possession of the bond and mortgage, and whose title thereto is found to have been recognized by James Arnold, is not a party to this action, and is not bound by this judgment.

1. The argument of the Appellant undoubtedly presents a *188 case in which, good faith on his part being assumed, there is apparently possible hardship; for if Hiram Arnold were to prosecute an action against him upon the bond and mortgage in question, this judgment, and payment according to its requirement, would not per se protect him against a judgment in favor of Hiram, by which he might be compelled to pay it a second time.

But it is clear that this very concession is conclusive against the Appellant, on the claim that the decree was erroneous for want of parties.

By the express terms of the Code, a Defendant who neither by demurrer nor answer takes that objection waives it, and he can-, not therefore be afterwards heard to object, on that ground, to any decree to which, upon the facts alleged and proved, the Plaintiff is entitled. As to him, the cause thereafter proceeds with the like right in the Plaintiff to a decree as if the supposed proper or necessary party were in Court. (Code, § 148.)

The only qualification of the right of the Plaintiff to a decree according to the case made by his complaint, and proved on the trial, where the Defendant has not, by his answer, raised the objection, is found in section 122 of the Code, which provides that where the controversy between the parties before the Court cannot be determined without prejudice to the rights of others, or by saving those rights, the Court must cause such others to be brought in.

How, the Appellant’s case presents this dilemma. If this judgment in anywise operates to the prejudice of Hiram Arnold, it can only do so by being deemed to conclude him; and if that were so it would protect the Appellant, and his objection would be groundless for that reason. But if, as must be conceded, this judgment would not operate at all to prevent the collection of the mortgage by Hiram Arnold, then this was not a case in which it was the duty of the Court to. cause him to be made a party.

This latter section of the Code (§ 122) was not intended for the protection of one who was made a party, however much he is *189 liable to suffer from the abuse of some other party. He must protect himself by raising the objection in the manner prescribed by law. The Court, in ordering parties to be brought in, is only bound to look to their protection, and not to the protection of those who, having appeared, have waived the objection. In this the Court exercise an important power to protect absent parties against possible collusion or oversight by those who are before it.

Before the Code, it was held by the Chancellor that where a Defendant neglects to make the objection by plea, answer, or demurrer of the want of parties, who are only necessary for his protection from further litigation, the Court has a discretion, and may refuse to sustain the objection at the hearing, or ,to require the complaint to add new parties at that stage of the action. (Dias v. Bouchand, 10 Paige, 447.) The Code has now definitely enacted that such an objection shall be deemed waived.

The suggestion of the Appellant is plausible, that there was nothing in the Plaintiffs’ complaint that was calculated to apprise him, or that did, in fact, inform him, that the Plaintiffs sought to charge him as debtor to James Arnold by bond and mortgage or otherwise. Ho fact stated in the complaint imported that he was such debtor, and no fact stated, nor relief prayed, indicated that the Plaintiffs had, or claimed to have, any right to, or equitable lien upon, the bond and mortgage; and therefore the necessity, or even the propriety, of making Hiram Arnold a party did not appear, and he had no reason to suppose it either necessary or proper. He could not, therefore, be deemed in any fault for not making the objection that a claimant of this bond and mortgage was not made a Defendant, when the complaint neither directly nor indirectly suggested to him that the title to the bond and mortgage was called in question, or that he was chargeable as debtor of James Arnold by reason thereof. The only allegation addressed to him, or to his relations with James Arnold, the judgment debtor, or to his possible liability in favor of the Plaintiffs, was, that he was the grantee in a fraudulent conveyance of real estate, which was void, and the property will be taken to satisfy the judgments.

*190 So far as this argument involves or suggests that, under the allegations in the complaint, it was erroneous to decree in favor i of the Plaintiffs’ payment out of a bond and mortgage that was not mentioned therein, or that the allegations in the complaint were not sufficient to warrant the relief which was awarded it, will be presently considered. But so far as it imports that Hiram Arnold ought to have been a party, and that the Defendant is wronged by a decree which he had no reason to anticipate, because the complaint did not apprise him that any question touching the bond and mortgage was involved in the action, the answer is, I think, this: First, as before suggested, the statute is absolute,, that the objection that Hiram Arnold is not a party is to be deemed waived ; second, the Code gives the Court ample power to relieve a party from the consequences of omissions which happen without fault, or through excusable neglect, and to permit the amendment of his pleading, if his case seems to require it. If, by reason of the generality of the allegations in the complaint, or its indefiniteness, the defendant was reasonably ignorant, as he now claims, and he had made' the importance that Hiram Arnold should be made a party for his protection apparent, as he now does, in argument, I cannot doubt that so soon before judgment as the fact appeared, that this bond and mortgage was in fact the subject of claim by the Plaintiffs, the Court below would have permitted the Defendant to amend his answer, or file a supplemental answer and raise the objection. Indeed, it is not clear that the Defendant might not of right have interposed a supplemental answer in the nature of a cross-bill and interpleader, and so have brought in the said Hiram. (Code, §§ 172, 173, 174, and 177.)

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. 287, 7 Trans. App. 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durand-v-hankerson-ny-1868.