Harrington v. Libby

6 Daly 259
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 31, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 6 Daly 259 (Harrington v. Libby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrington v. Libby, 6 Daly 259 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

The obligation of the defendant to account in this action, was decided upon the trial of it before Judge Barrett. The objection was there made that an accounting had been regularly instituted before the surrogate, and that his decree in that proceeding was conclusive, and binding alike upon the administrator and the collector, the defendant in the present action. Judge Barrett found, as matter of fact, that there was no accounting before the surrogate when this action was commenced, and no accounting afterwards, because the accounting relied upon was ex parte, the original plaintiff, Mrs. Christy, the administratrix, not being a party to it.. The respondent states that no exceptions were taken to the findings of fact by Judge Barrett, but we find the exceptions incorporated in the case. The judge decreed that the defendant should account, and appointed a referee to take the accounting. From this decision, or interlocutory judgment, the defendant appealed to the general term, and Judge Barrett’s decision was affirmed.

If these exceptions were taken, they must have been heard and passed upon by the general term, and cannot be again reviewed by the general term upon an appeal from the final judgment (Mapes v. Coffin, 5 Paige, 296). But if the question is an open one, and has not been reviewed in our previous decision, then I have no hesitation in holding that Judge Barrett’s decision was correct. A party who commences an action, or institutes a proceeding, has a right to discontinue it, even against the wishes of other parties to it (Innes v. Lansing, 7 Paige, 585); the only qualification being that he cannot discontinue without the payment of costs. There was no question of costs in this matter. Mrs. Christy filed a petition before the surrogate [262]*262that the defendant account, upon which an order was entered and a citation issued which was returnable on the 28th of October, 1867. Before the return day of the citation, Mrs. Christy served a notice, in writing, upon the' surrogate, that the proceeding was discontinued, which notice was placed on file in the surrogate’s office, and upon the same day, the 27th of October, 1867, the complaint in this action was served upon the defendant, requiring him to account in an action in this court. On the return day of the citation, the 28th of October, 1867, the day after the service of the complaint in this action upon the defendant, he appeared before the surrogate, and filed his account, and two days afterwards, 30th October, 1867, he filed a petition before the surrogate, for Mrs. C/:to show cause why she should not examine his account, and why he should not be discharged. No proceeding, therefore, appears to have been taken upon the petition filed by her. The auditor, who was a clerk in the surrogate’s office, swears that'the accounting that afterwards took place was upon the defendant’s petition, so that Mrs. Christy’s proceeding must be regarded as having been discontinued by the filing of the written notice which she gave in the surrogate’s office, and there is no ground for the assumption that the subsequent accounting was in continuation of the proceeding commenced by her. The defendant simply filed his account, as an administrator or executor may do, and it appears-that on the 12th of December, 1867, Mr. C. Bainbridge Smith, the attorney for the plaintiff in the present action, filed objections to that account. The petition filed by the defendant on the 30th of October, 1867, was for a final accounting and discharge. The citation served upon it would seem to have been returnable on the 20th of December, 18.67, for on that day the defendant appeared before the surrogate, and also W. R. Nicholls, Esq., who filed written objections by Mrs. Christy to-the surrogate proceeding to a final accounting, upon the ground that an action was then pending in this court to compel the defendant to account; that the defendant had appeared in the action by attorney, and that that action was pending when the defendant presented and filed his petition before the surrogate for a final accounting, which was filed with an affidavit of C. Bain[263]*263bridge Smith, Esq., Mrs. C.’s attorney, setting forth when the action in this court was commenced, when the complaint was served upon the defendant, the nature of the action, and that the defendant had appeared in it. Neither the defendant nor Surrogate Tucker paid any attention to this objection. The final accounting was subsequently proceeded with, ex parte, an auditor was appointed by the surrogate, who found that, of the $27,517 58 received by the defendant, he was required to pay over on the final settlement to the administratrix but $3,496 19, which was crediting him with $24,021 39, a result in extraordinary contrast with the referee’s report in the present action, who finds that the defendant owes the estate $30,854 46. The report of - the auditor, it would seem, was confirmed by the surrogate, and it is this proceeding which the defendant sets up as a bar to this action. In other words, the defendant claimed, upon the trial, that a proceeding instituted in the surrogate’s court, for a final accounting after the action for an accounting in this court had been brought and was pending, was a bar to any further proceeding in the action here. It was decided, upon a previous appeal to' the general term, that this court has jurisdiction in an action to compel a collector or special administrator to account, and I am at a loss to understand how it loses jurisdiction by the filing of a petition afterwards by the defend-0 ant in the surrogate’s court for a final accounting. There is nothing in the statutes relating to the surrogate’s court, that warrants any such construction. The statute simply provides for a mode of compelling an accounting before the surrogate, but it does not make it obligatory that that mode should be pursued, and no other. It does not take away, either by express words or by implication, the power of this or of other courts, having equitable jurisdiction, to give this equitable relief, and this court, being clothed with general equitable jurisdiction, may afford, in cases that require it, a mor-e ample and complete remedy than could be had by an accounting in the surrogate’s court. It certainly was not the design of the statute, that there should be two accountings, and if there were an account pending in the surrogate’s court when this action was commenced, we should undoubtedly refuse to entertain the action upon the ground that [264]*264the parties were already before a tribunal which had jurisdiction, and could compel a full and complete accounting, for if there are two actions or proceedings between the same parties for the same cause, the action or proceeding first commenced is a bar to the second; the rule being that if full relief can be had in the one action or proceeding, no others shall be allowed (Groshon v. Lyon, 16 Barb. 461; McCarthy v. Peake, 9 Abb. Pr. 164).

Hot only comity, but public policy, as was said by Chancellor Walworth, in Mead v. Merritt (2 Paige, 406), requires that courts should refrain from exercising their powers under such circumstances, that they may not be brought into collision with each other, and the right of suitors lost sight of in a useless struggle for what might -be considered their legitimate powers and rights, and which he practically carried out in another case, where it appeared that the subject-matter in controversy was already before the United States Circuit Court of this district (Mitchell v. Bunch, 2 Paige, 620).

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Bluebook (online)
6 Daly 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-libby-nyctcompl-1875.