Snow v. Shreffler

148 A.D. 422, 132 N.Y.S. 895, 3 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R., (N.S.) 122, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 221
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 29, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 148 A.D. 422 (Snow v. Shreffler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snow v. Shreffler, 148 A.D. 422, 132 N.Y.S. 895, 3 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R., (N.S.) 122, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 221 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Spring, J.:

At the outset and before presenting the facts contained in. the-record, and in order the better to comprehend their application, I will state the questions of fact involved and of what Sebring is adjudged guilty of contempt. . . 1

There were two quéstions of fact litigated before Justice Sutherland. First. Whether Sebring knew of the stipulation given by G-ridley, the attorney for the defendant, about the fifteenth day of February of the present year. Second. Whether he violated the direction of Justice Clark made February eighteenth of the present year to notify Hr. Leary, the attorney for the plaintiff, of the adjournment of the proceeding then pending to February twenty-fifth. The judge at Special Term has acquitted Sebring of any knowledge of the stipulation referred to on the ground that the evidence was insufficient [424]*424to sustain a finding that he possessed such knowledge, so that charge is now eliminated. He, however, finds him guilty of contempt in that he failed to obey the • direction of Justice Clark to inform. Leary of the adjournment referred to, and that he obtained the order on February twenty-fifth in willful violation of his promise to notify Leary of the postponement and without informing Justice Clark of such omission.

The order, among other determinations, adjudges: “That it was the duty of said Sebring to notify said Leary in accordance with the direction of the court and his promise; and when he had failed to give said notice it was his duty as an attorney and counsel of this court to inform the court of that failure; and his application for the order and obtaining the same without notifying the court that he had failed to carry out his promise was calculated to and did; deceive the court, and was a wilful violation of the duty of Sebring as an officer of this court and as an attorney and counselor thereof.” Later on the order proceeds: “ And it is further ordered and adjudged, that the said order of February 25, 1911, was obtained by the said James 0. Sebring through a wilful and deliberate violation of duty on his part in his capacity as an attorney and officer of the Court. And it is further ordered arid adjudged that by reason of all the foregoing facts and conclusions, James 0. Sebring is guilty of a civil contempt of Court for fraud and imposition upon the Court, and for a wilful neglect and violation of his duty as attorney and-counsel of this Cburt.”

And Sebring is fined the amount of the fine imposed upon the defendant when he was imprisoned, with interest from the date of the incarceration; and the sheriff is further directed to commit him to the county jail to be confined until the fine is paid, or until he is otherwise discharged according to law.

On April 12, 1910, a judgment was recovered in this action against the defendant for $1,000. An execution was issued and returned wholly unsatisfied, and proceedings supplementary to execution were instituted, the order containing the usual clause prohibiting the defendant from transferring his property, etc. An order was granted by the county judge of Tates county adjudging the defendant guilty of coritempt of court in violating the injunction order, in that he had paid some debts [425]*425and disposed of some of his property in disobedience to the injunction order mentioned, and directed that he be committed to the Yates county jail until the fine of $1,100 be paid, and which was the amount of the judgment, with $100 costs, with which he was charged. The defendant was imprisoned in the jail on the 10th of June, 1910. The order of the county judge was affirmed by this court (Matter of Snow v. Shreffler, 140 App. Div. 915).

Three applications for the discharge of the defendant were made; two at Special Term, and one before the county judge of Yates county, each of which was denied, the last one January 7, 1911, by the Special Term. On the thirteenth of February of the present year an order to show cause was granted why the defendant should not be discharged, returnable February eighteenth at the Special Term at Bath, in the county of Steuben. One of the grounds for the renewal of this motion was that more than six months had elapsed since the imprisonment of the defendant, which may be a tenable ground. (See Judiciary Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 30 ; Laws of 1909, chap. 35], § 774.)

Abraham G-ridley, of Penn Yan, was the attorney for the defendant in all these proceedings, but Mr. Sebring, of Corning, was the counsel and had actual charge of them, arguing each motion. On the fifteenth of February, Mr. Leary, who was the attorney for the plaintiff and who had opposed successfully the preceding applications for a discharge of. the defendant, applied to Mr. G-ridley at Penn Yan for a postponement for two weeks of the hearing to be had in pursuance of the order to show cause on the ground that his wife was very ill, requiring his constant personal attention. Mr. G-ridley was somewhat reluctant to grant this motion. Mrs. Shreffler, who lived in Penn Yan, was very insistent that there should be no delay in this proceeding. Her husband was in jail; they had a son who was in the high school and, naturally, she felt very acutely the fact that her husband had been so long imprisoned. Gridley, therefore, stated to Mr. Leary that he did not wish to grant the application without conferring with Mr. Sebring. Mr. Leary left the office, of Gridley and the latter communicated with Mr. Sebring by telephone, and Mr. Sebring stated [426]*426that he would consent to a postponement of one week, but no longer, to which Mr. Gridley assented. Mr. Leary returned in the afternoon and claimed he had a right to this stipulation for the adjournment, and Mr. Gridley very reluctantly signed a stipulation postponing the hearing of the motion until March fourth at Coming and without prejudice.

Mr. Sebring testified that he knew nothing of this stipulation; that he heard nothing further from Mr. Gridley after their-conversation over the telephone and that he assumed if any adjournment whatever was granted it would be only for one week, as he had explicitly stated to Mr. Gridley. Mr. Gridley makes two or three affidavits and testified on this subject, but in the final analysis his testimony is that he is positive that he wrote a letter to Mr. Sebring advising him of the stipulation which he had given, but he is not positive that he ever mailed it. Another letter which he had written to Mr. . Sebring he found on his desk unmailed, arid the evidence is that he was often negligent and. forgetful, and that he owned a farm outside of the village which required his attention; and he was further distressed by the sickness oí a daughter. His testimony and his letters are very unsatisfactory.

Sebring testified that on the eighteenth of March, after the denial of the application for the discharge of the defendant, he called Gridley on the phone, informing him that Leary had claimed at the Special Term that-Gridley had signed a stipulation postponing the hearing for-two weeks, and Gridley corroborates this testimony. Two days later, in a letter to Sebring, Gridley writes: “How did I advise you of the terms of .that stipulation % I have no memorandum of it if I did. You know whether I talked such an agreement over the phone, or if I wrote you to that effect.” And referring to his uncertain opinion that he had written to Sebring, adds, “ but that is- only a hazy suggestion in my "own memory. I don’t know.”

Upon this, with other evidence, Justice Sutherland was convinced that Mr. Sebring did not know of the stipulation mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
148 A.D. 422, 132 N.Y.S. 895, 3 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R., (N.S.) 122, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snow-v-shreffler-nyappdiv-1911.