Kneeland v. Hurdy
This text of 97 N.Y.S. 957 (Kneeland v. Hurdy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The circumstances under which plaintiff claims that defendant agreed to pay him for his services as an attorney are rather peculiar. He claims that he went to court, at the request of the defendant’s attorney of record in a divorce case in which she was plaintiff, for the purpose of taking a default therein, and that when he reached the court, and before acting in compliance with the request of the attorney who sent him, he told the defendant that she would be obliged to pay him $50. for the service that he was about to render, to which she assented. Not only does defendant emphatically deny such an arrangement, but she is supported in her denial by a witness who was in court upon the default, and who had been a student in the office of the defendant’s attorney of record in the divorce case, and who was •instrumental in bringing the case to said attorney. Defendant’s, attorney in the divorce action was called as a witness by plaintiff, who did not testify that when he asked plaintiff to go to court that he told plaintiff that defendant would pay him for his services, or that he had any authority from défendant to engage him; and although this witness testified that, when he accepted a retainer from the law student who brought him the case, he told him he would not try the case, yet he nevertheless admits that he was paid for trying the case.
To permit this judgment to stand would be to compel the defendant to pay two lawyers for the same service, when no previous understanding had been made with her as to the need of a second lawyer. It is undisputed that defendant had no knowledge of plaintiff’s existence, nor of the fact that a strange lawyer was to appear for her, until she reached court, whither she had been requested to go by her own attorney. We think that justice requires a reversal of the judgment.
Judgment'reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to’appellant to abide the event. All concur. .
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
97 N.Y.S. 957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kneeland-v-hurdy-nyappterm-1906.