In re Smith

94 A. 39, 84 N.J. Eq. 252, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 29, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 94 A. 39 (In re Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Smith, 94 A. 39, 84 N.J. Eq. 252, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79 (N.J. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

This is a proceeding against a solicitor of this court alleging malpractice, and is based upon an affidavit of the client relating to the solicitor’s conduct in the prosecution of a suit for divorce against the client’s wife. The affidavit is not drawn in the shape of a formal charge, but sets out the client’s statement of facts relating to the employment and conduct of the solicitor. Upon this statement an order was issued, directing the solicitor to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of malpractice in the matters set forth in the affidavit. ’ Upon this affidavit and order the matter was referred to me for hearing by the chancellor, of his own motion, and also to advise the order or decree to be made. On the oral hearing before me the solicitor has appeared and testified, and his counsel have been heard. No formal answer has been filed nor application to file one made by the respondent or his counsel. The affidavit shows substantially [253]*253an employment of the solicitor in May, 1911, to conduct for his client an action for divorce against his wife for the sum of $150, of which the client had paid $92; that the petition was filed on June 28th, 1911, and a citation then issued, but that nothing further was done until March 4th, 1912, when another citation was issued and returned by the sheriff, not served because of non-residence in the state; that on April 15th, 1912, Advisory Master Biddle filed a memorandum in the case, calling attention to a defect in the petition, apparent on its face, and stating that an amended petition should be filed at once so as to avoid delay. The affidavit of the client, sworn to on May 16th, 1914, further charges that since the filing of this memorandum no further action had been taken by the solicitor in the prosecution of the cause, and that upon learning of this failure of the solicitor to proceed with the cause, he refused to pay him any more money; that in the early part of April, 1914, the solicitor demanded of him the payment of $25 to go to Trenton and revive the cause, which he refused to pay.

The client and the solicitor were the only witnesses examined, and by the evidence these facts appear: The solicitor was employed in May, 1911, to prosecute this action for divorce, and agreed to do so for the sum of $150. This amount, however, was not to be paid at once, but as the suit progressed. Twenty-five dollars was paid about the time of the employment, May 20th, 1911, and a further sum of $25 before the filing of the petition, June 28th, 1911. At the time of filing the petition the client was a resident of Newark, and had been for about two years. His wife resided in Massachusetts. The marriage had taken place in Massachusetts in 1899, and the ground for divorce was adultery in May, 1905, with a'man named Grace, committed in the State of Rhode Island. At the time when this cause of action for divorce arose, in 1905, the client resided in New York City, and removed to Newark in June, 1909. These jurisdictional facts were set out in the petition, but following them was the further allegation (paragraph 3) “that adultery by either of the parties to a marriage is recognized as a valid cause for a divorce from the bonds of matrimony by the laws of the State of Rhode Island.” The defect in the petition to which the advisory [254]*254master called attention was, that under the Divorce act of 1907, section 7b, where the petitioner became a resident of this state after the cause of action arose, the petition must show that the cause alleged was a ground of divorce in the state where the petitioner then resided — that is, New York — and not where the offence was committed, and that the law of New York, rather than that of Rhode Island, should have been pleaded. He advised an immediate amendment to avoid delay.

This defect could have been cured immediately, as it required no change in the facts stated in the petition except as to the state whose law was applicable to the cause of action stated. But a delay of ten months had already occurred, and in the meantime the client had paid the solicitor $25 in October, 1911, $15 on March 16th, 1912, and a further sum of $2, making in all, $92. On July 25th, 1911, nearly a month after filing the original petition, a citation returnable August 26th, 1911, was issued, and by the solicitor mailed to the sheriff on July 25th, 1911, with information as to defendant’s residence in Massachusetts, for affidavit on return. The sheriff’s affidavit, taken on July 27th, was annexed to the citation. This citation and return was not, however, returned to the clerk’s office. It was produced on this hearing by the solicitor, and his explanation of the failure to return is that the citation had been lost in the sheriff’s office or mislaid. It appears, however, that on October 7th, 1911, another payment of $25 was made without apparently any steps to procure the return or to issue a new citation until March 4th, 1912, when another citation was issued, returnable April 6th, and mailed by the solicitor to the sheriff on March 14th, with the same information as to residence of defendant in Massachusetts, as had been given on the original citation. To this return by affidavit dated March 14th, 1912, was made. Two days later, on March 16th, another payment of $15 was made an amount sufficient to cover costs of advertisement on publication. In April, 1912, and before April 15th, the solicitor sent to the clerk the order for publication, and upon application for this order, the defect in the petition above referred to was called to the attention of the solicitor. In the meantime the client had left his residence in Newark, 285 Peshine avenue, and the solici[255]*255tor writing to liim at his Newark address, his letters were returned. One oí these letters, dated May 28th, 1912, refers to a letter written three weeks before, to which he had received no reply, and says, "It is necessary that you see me if you wish to continue your case, also I asked you for a remittance.” This letter gave no information about the ease, or the point which had arisen. On May 30th, 1912, the client wrote to the solicitor, stating that he was too busy to see him when he got the letter, inquiring how his case stood, as it had been a year since it began, and wished to know when he would get his papers. He said be would pay the balance of the money just as soon as the papers were ready. On or about June 28th, the client did see his solicitor in Newark, and an amended petition was sworn to on that day by the petitioner, before a master in chancery, at Newark. This petition differs from the first petition only in the third paragraph, and in changing the words "laws of the State of Rhode Island” to "the laws of the State of New York in 1905.” The residence of the petitioner in the amended petition as sworn to was still alleged to be the city of Newark, since June, 1909. This amended petition, although sworn to, was never filed, and from the evidence of both solicitor and client, it is evident, I think, that in connection with the filing of this petition, and .going on with the cause, there was conversation upon the subject of the residence of the client in New Jersey during the continuance of the suit. The client says that his solicitor told him that all that was necessary was that he should have an address in New Jersey, and that Jersey City was suggested as a convenient place for the address. The solicitor, on the other hand, says that he told the client he must continue to have a bona fide residence in New Jersey till he got his decree.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 39, 84 N.J. Eq. 252, 1915 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-smith-njch-1915.