Lazzarone v. Oishei

2 Misc. 200, 21 N.Y.S. 267, 49 N.Y. St. Rep. 520
CourtSuperior Court of Buffalo
DecidedDecember 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Misc. 200 (Lazzarone v. Oishei) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lazzarone v. Oishei, 2 Misc. 200, 21 N.Y.S. 267, 49 N.Y. St. Rep. 520 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Hatch, J.

While the testimony in the court below was conflicting, yet the facts upon which this appeal is to be determined are practically undisputed. It appears that the plaintiff was injured hy the Allegany and Kinzua Railroad Company, and thereafter entered into a contract with the defendant, Oishei, to prosecute said company for damages [201]*201sustained. Oishei in consideration of the contract was to receive two-thirds of the recovery, he was to advance money to pay doctors’ bills- and other charges and employ an attorney to prosecute the claim. An action was begun against the railroad company under this arrangement, and was pending when the plaintiff, intending to deprive said Oishei of the benefits of his contract, secretly settled said action with the company and refused to pay Oishei anything. Thereupon, Oishei made complaint to the police magistrate of the city, upon Avhich a criminal warrant was issued, plaintiff was arrested thereunder, and lodged in jail. What the charge made against him was, does not apjiear, but Oishei states that plaintiff was u confined in jail four or five days upon the Warrant issued by Justice King until the civil proceeding could be instituted.” Ho criminal charge was ever pressed, and plaintiff, having obtained counsel, was taken before the magistrate and discharged, and was immediately rearrested by virtue of an order of arrest, issuing out of the County Court of Erie County, in an action brought by Oishei to recover damages for the claimed fraudulent settlement. A motion was thereafter made to discharge the order of arrest, which was denied, and from such decision an appeal was taken to the General Term of the Supreme Court, where said order was reversed and plaintiff was discharged. While the plaintiff was confined in jail, and after an appeal had been taken from the decision of the County Court, but before it was heard in the appellate tribunal, Oishei, at the instance of plaintiff’s wife, visited plaintiff at the jail, and stated to him among other things, “ If you pay me what you owe me I will let you out right away. I don’t want anything more than what you owe me.” At another interview Oishei said he would let him out “ on the conditions that he would release my bondsmen and release me from all claims and would pay me the amount that he had obtained from me in the month of December, what disbursements I had been put to. He said he would do that. * * * I told him I Avould furnish him the necessary bondsmen to bail him out.” After this [202]*202eonversation, plaintiff, while in custody, executed and delivered to Oishei a note for seventy dollars, and also executed,, acknowledged and delivered a general release of all causes of action against Oishei and his codefendants. Thereupon a bail bond was executed and plaintiff released. Although the. release is not dated, it appears elsewhere that it was in fact executed on the 23d of May, 1891, while plaintiff had been imprisoned since about the twenty-ffrst day of March previous.

When plaintiff made his settlement with the railroad company, said company executed an agreement, in consideration, of the settlement, whereby it agreed to protect plaintiff against any action on the part of the attorney on account, thereof. After plaintiff was released on bail, he authorized Oishei, in writing, to bring an action for damages on account of his imprisonment, loss, etc., and the action was subsequently brought, and was pending at the time the appeal was heard at. General Term. During all the time in which these proceedings were taken, after the arrest of plaintiff under the warrant issued by the police magistrate, the attorney now representing plaintiff, acted for him; he procured his discharge under the warrant, to his hands came the order of arrest, he made the. motion to discharge him therefrom, and upon its denial, took the appeal, and subsequently argued it at General Term. When he had succeeded there, and established a liability upon the bond given upon the order of arrest, he brought this action, and then for the first time was confronted with the release; he learned then for the first time what steps had been taken, of which before he was substantially ignorant.

The plaintiff is an Italian, neither reads nor speaks the English language. Oishei speaks both Italian and English fluently; he was not at the time of the first arrest, an attorney, but when the release was obtained, he was admitted as an attorney, and practiced at the bar.

There are many other circumstances not noted here or referred to, all of which are pertinent, but it does not seem necessary to refer to more. The court below held the release-a bar to right of recovery, and rendered judgment for costs-[203]*203against plaintiff; hence the appeal. I should be disposed to hold, in the absence of any authority, that the note and release, taken from plaintiff, under the circumstances of this case, are void, creating no liability against him, and not affecting defendant’s liability upon their bond. Abundant authority, however, establishes such conclusion. There was in this case, duress of imprisonment; plaintiff was imprisoned, first upon a fictitious chai-ge, subsequently was arrested under a claim which did not authorize his arrest, and in order to relieve himself, after long imprisonment, executed the papers. E"o right of arrest or imprisonment existed in either case, and no paper executed to procure his liberty, bound him. Foshay v. Ferguson, 5 Hill, 154.

In Evans v. Begleys, 2 Wend. 243, the court held that a judgment, entered upon a bond and warrant of attorney executed by defendants while in close custody, would be set aside. While in Guilleaume v. Rowe, 94 N. Y. 212, it was said by Judge Dastobth : “ The instrument on which lie relies, was executed by the plaintiff without consideration, and while enduring an imprisonment, which was illegal. It was, therefore, void for duress "x" * "x" and the defendants could acquire no right under it,” citing with approval the cases before cited. In Scholey v. Mumford, 60 N. Y. 501, it was said by Judge Rapallo, in speaking of a person: ££ When he acts under any species of compulsion, the payment is not voluntary.” There the rule was applied in the case of duress of property. The same rule had been before asserted in Harmony v. Bingham, 12 N. Y. 116. In Admis v. Irving Nat. Bank, 116 id. 613, many authorities are collected, and the rule finally stated to be, is: ££ That whenever a party is so situated as to exercise a controlling influence over the will, conduct and interest of another, contracts thus made will be set aside.” Boutel v. Owens, 2 Sandf. 655.

In the present case, it was well known to Oishei that plaintiff had procured counsel at the time he was arrested, a motion had been made, and he had made many affidavits therein, he knew that efforts were being made to set aside the order, and [204]*204must be presumed to have known, that if the order was set aside, his liability attached for damages, growing out of the illegal arrest and imprisonment. At this juncture he procures the release from any liability upon the bond, obtains a note for seventy dollars, procures bail for plaintiff, and thus having security, and release from contingent liability, conceals the same from plaintiff’s attorney and argues the appeal from the order. If he had succeeded and the order were affirmed, he could immediately clap plaintiff in jail, by causing his bail, which he controlled, to surrender him, and thus plaintiff would have gained nothing while Oishei ran no risk.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Misc. 200, 21 N.Y.S. 267, 49 N.Y. St. Rep. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lazzarone-v-oishei-nysuperctbuf-1892.