Kuehn v. Syracuse Rapid Transit Railway Co.

76 N.E. 589, 183 N.Y. 456, 21 Bedell 456, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 801
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 76 N.E. 589 (Kuehn v. Syracuse Rapid Transit Railway Co.) 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
Kuehn v. Syracuse Rapid Transit Railway Co., 76 N.E. 589, 183 N.Y. 456, 21 Bedell 456, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 801 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

Werner, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the negligence of the defendant. The present appeal has no relation to the merits of the case, but *458 arises upon the question whether the learned trial court properly declined to order a discontinuance of the action upon the motion of the defendant. The questions certified with the permission to appeal to this court are :

1. Was it error to permit the trial court to continue the trial under the circumstances disclosed by the record ?

2. Was it necessary for the defendant to plead the alleged stipulation and release in a supplemental answer, in order to avail themselves of them ?

3. Was the defendant entitled to an order of discontinuance of this action, and to have the verdict set aside upon its application' under the circumstances disclosed by the record, upon paying plaintiff’s attorneys the amount of their compensation, costs and disbursements upon the basis of the alleged settlement ?

4. Was it error to deny defendant’s application for leave to file additional affidavits ?

The procedure in this case, a detailed recital of which is essential to a proper understanding of the questions certified, illustrates the facility Yvitli Yvhioh mistakes in practice may be multiplied when once a wrong beginning has been made, as well as the difficulty of making satisfactory answers to certified questions Yv.lien neither side has a monopoly of the errors committed.

It appears that the defendant, several days before the case ivas moved for trial, obtained from the plaintiff a general release from all damages and a stipulation for the discontinuance of the action. At the trial, after a jury had been impaneled and when plaintiff’s counsel ivas about to make his opening statement of the case, defendant’s counsel produced the stipulation signed by the plaintiff and defendant respectively, and asked for a discontinuance of the action. This was the first intimation to plaintiff’s counsel that a settlement of the action had been effected. Their client ivas not in court, and they objected to any recognition of the stipulation on the ground that it had not been pleaded, and insisted upon a continuance of the action to establish their attorney’s lien. *459 Defendant’s counsel then and there expressed their readiness to pay to plaintiff’s counsel any and all sums to which they were entitled for their costs, disbursements and compensation upon the basis of the settlement. This offer was declined, and, after an extended colloquy between the court and the respective counsel, the matter was adjourned until the following day. Pending this adjournment plaintiff’s counsel had an interview with their client and learned that an agent of the defendant, accompanied by the minister of the church attended by the plaintiff, called at the house of the latter, paid him $500 in cash,' promised to pay him $2,000 more, and induced him to sign a receiptt, a general release and a stipulation for the discontinuance of the action without costs. This stipulation was also signed by an officer of the defendant. When the court reconvened after the adjournment referred to, plaintiff’s counsel claimed that the release and stipulation had been procured by fraud and deception practiced upon the plaintiff by the agents of the defendant. In the course of the discussion which ensued, the learned trial court intimated that if the settlement had been honestly procured, the lien of plaintiff’s counsel was thereby transferred from the cause of action to the fund created by the settlement. At this point defendant’s counsel suggested to the court that a reference should be ordered to ascertain whether the plaintiff had signed the papers, and the court replied, “No, unless you- desire to move to put the case over the term and amend your answer the case will have to go on.” Further discussion followed, as a result of which plaintiff’s counsel were permitted to open the case to the jury and to introduce evidence on behalf of the plaintiff. After the direct examination of the latter he was cross-examined by defendant’s counsel as to his signature to the stipulation for discontinuance, and it was offered in evidence but excluded under the objection of plaintiff’s counsel. Other witnesses were then called on behalf of the plaintiff, but were not cross-examined. The plaintiff himself was then recalled for further cross-examination, and the defendant’s counsel made a second unsuccessful attempt to put the stipulation in *460 evidence. At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant’s counsel protested against the taking of evidence in the action, on the ground that the case had been settled, and again presented the stipulation to the court, with the request that an order of discontinuance be entered thereon. The application ivas denied and defendant’s counsel excepted. A motion was then made for a dismissal of the complaint on the ground that it appeared that the plaintiff and the defendant had discontinued the action before it was moved for trial, and that motion Avas also denied. Then defendant’s counsel called the claim agent of the defendant as a witness, and after identifying the stipulation, and proving plaintiff’s signature thereto, again offered it in evidence. Plaintiff’s counsel objected that it Avas incompetent and inadmissible under the pleadings. The court sustained this objection. The release referred to Avas then shown to the Aidtness and identified by him as a paper which had also been signed by the plaintiff, and defendant’s counsel offered it in evidence in connection with the stipulation. Plaintiff’s counsel objected to it as incompetent and inadmissible under the pleadings, and the objection was sustained. The clergyman who accompanied the defendant’s claim agent at the time Avlien the stipulation and release were executed by the plaintiff, was also called as a Avitness on behalf of the defendant, and another attempt Avas made to prove the plaintiff’s execution of the papers referred to, but the objections of plaintiff’s counsel were again sustained. At this juncture defendant’s counsel stated that “ in view of the situation in this case, I call upon the attorneys for the plaintiff to specify or state the amount of their claim or lien Avhich they claim to have upon this cause of action.” This the plaintiff’s counsel refused to do, and then defendant’s counsel, on behalf of the defendant, tendered to plaintiff’s counsel the sum of $1,500 in gold to cover their lien in the case. This offer was also declined by plaintiff’s counsel, not on the ground of any informality or technicality, but because there had been no settlement of the case. At the close of the proceedings, which have been *461 detailed in bare outline, the court submitted the case to the jury, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff.

Thereafter defendant’s counsel moved to set aside the verdict and for an order of discontinuance upon the stipulation and release referred to. Before the hearing of the argument on this motion, plaintiff’s counsel in open court tendered back to the defendant the sum of §500 which the latter had paid to the plaintiff at the time of the execution of the stipulation and release.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 N.E. 589, 183 N.Y. 456, 21 Bedell 456, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuehn-v-syracuse-rapid-transit-railway-co-ny-1906.