Schaick v. Carr

159 Misc. 873, 289 N.Y.S. 495, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1360
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 Misc. 873 (Schaick v. Carr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaick v. Carr, 159 Misc. 873, 289 N.Y.S. 495, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1360 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Frankenthaler, J.

Two actións brought by the Superintendent of Insurance against directors of the State Title and Mortgage Company and General Surety Company to recover for various acts of mismanagement, waste, non-feasance, etc., alleged to have [875]*875occurred during their respective terms of office, have been assigned for trial to this court, sitting in Special Term, Part VI. Twenty-two of the thirty-two different defendants now move for an order referring the actions back to Special Term, Part III, the calendar part, on the ground that the previous proceedings had before this court in connection with applications for leave to compromise the actions have prejudiced the court against the defendants and have made a fair and impartial trial “ difficult, if not well-nigh impossible.”

The actions were originally called for trial at Special Term, Part III, on October 18, 1935, and the justice then presiding in that part assigned them for trial before himself at Special Term, Part IV, on October 23,1935. Thereafter a petition for leave to compromise the actions as to most of the defendants was submitted to this court, sitting in the Additional Special Term for Rehabilitation. While the settlement application was pending before this court, the trial was adjourned by the justice sitting in Special Term, Part IV, from time to time, and finally on November 27, 1935, the cases were referred for trial to this court, then sitting in Special Term, Part VI. According to the defendants, this was done upon the consent of all the parties for the express reason that the pendency of the application for leave to compromise the actions, and the necessity of repeated adjournments of these actions, until such applications were decided, made ” the order of reference expedient and advisable.” On December 18, 1935, this court denied the petition for leave to compromise the actions, on the ground that the settlement was recommended solely because so many defendants were claimed to be “ financially irresponsible ” and their irresponsibility had not been affirmatively shown in the Superintendent’s petition. The denial was without prejudice to a renewal on proper papers.” February 10, 1936, was then fixed as the date of trial.

On February tenth, when the actions were called for trial, an adjournment was asked by many of the defendants to enable them to submit to financial examination by the Superintendent’s counsel and to submit new offers of settlement and to prepare for trial in the event that settlements would not be made or approved by the Court.” An attorney representing several of the defendants moved orally, at the time, that the actions be assigned to another justice for trial, on the ground that this court had been engaged in the rehabilitation part ” and had “ entertained the application for settlement,” and had listened to all of the arguments of counsel.” Although this attorney stated that everyone in this room has absolute confidence in your Honor’s fairness, integrity and everything else,” he maintained that the court was not qualified ” to try the actions. The court then asked, “ Is there anyone else [876]*876who .cares to join in this application? ” No one responded. The motion was thereupon denied and the trial adjourned to March fifth.

Thereafter seventeen defendants made new offers of settlement which the Superintendent of Insurance submitted to this court for approval. While these applications were pending the trial was adjourned to March nineteenth. On March eighteenth the court handed down an opinion declining to grant any of the applications. Six, based solely upon the financial circumstances of the offerors, were denied as inadequate. Four, predicated upon the alleged existence of doubt as to liability, as well as upon the .claimed financial irresponsibility of the offerors, were denied with leave to renew on papers indicating the existence of a reasonable basis for the doubt. The remaining seven applications, involving relatively small amounts, were held in abeyance.

When the actions were called for trial on March nineteenth, counsel for one of the defendants, despite the fact that on February tenth he had expressly indicated that he did not join in the objection then made to the trial of the actions by this court, moved orally that both cases be referred back to the calendar part. Although he admitted that most of the settlement applications raised the question of the financial responsibility of the defendants more than that of the legal liability,” he added: “ Nevertheless, I think your Honor would have to be something more than human if, sitting in these cases, there were not something of a predilection against the defendants. I think it would be most difficult for your Honor to have presented to you the defenses on which you would have to rule with respect to the defendants who had made offers and whose offers your Honor has declined to accept. I think I may say that without in the slightest impugning your Honor’s . sincerity, if your Honor says you are not in the slightest degree 'affected by these applications. I don’t think the question is one of the attitude of the Court and the best efforts of the Court, but I think it is one in which is involved an almost impossibility of severance of approach, mental attitude toward the cases, since if your Honor were to find for the defendants, you would be confronted by the fact that applications with substantial sums of money offered had been declined by your Honor.” Various other attorneys joined in the application. Permission was granted to make a formal application upon written papers and the trial was in the meantime adjourned.

The claim of disqualification in the formal motion is based upon the following: (1) The “ virtual human impossibility for the Court to determine with absolute impartiality the rights of the respective [877]*877parties at bar ” in view of the “ sympathetic predisposition in favor of * * * certificate holders ” derived by the court from its work in connection with the rehabilitation of the mortgage guaranty companies; (2) the possibility that the offers of compromise made by many of the defendants and rejected by the court as inadequate “ might subconsciously be regarded by the Court as an admission of liability,” together with the further possibility that “ the information which the Court has received with respect to the financial status of the defendants might also become a factor in the ultimate judgment of the Court, in the event that it presided at the trial and was required to determine the ultimate liability of the defendants at bar;” (3) the possibility that the Court having disapproved offers of compromise which would have netted the estate of these companies a sum of $143,850.00 might be influenced subconsciously in determining "ultimate liability by the consideration that a decision in favor of the defendants would subject the Court to criticism because by its disapproval of the offers of compromise the estate has been deprived of the sums of money offered at bar;” (4) that the court’s opinion in disapproving applications to compromise the actions as to many of the defendants indicated its feeling that the defendants, the directors of the companies, should contribute liberally and generously out of their substance to the end that a fund be available for distribution among the certificate holders and other creditors of the companies, and (5) that the same opinion expressed the hope, if not an implied invitation to the defendants, to increase their offers.

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Bluebook (online)
159 Misc. 873, 289 N.Y.S. 495, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaick-v-carr-nysupct-1936.