Tilman v. Keane
This text of 1 Abb. Pr. 23 (Tilman v. Keane) 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.
Opinion
The referee should state the findings of fact and conclusion of law in his report. It would deprive the party of his right to except, if the judgment was to be entered before the findings of the referee are made public. The law requires him to except within ten days after judgment is en[25]*25tered. notice served, If the findings are not inserted in the report, and judgment is entered without them, the plaintiff might, by giving notice of the judgment and delaying the action of the referee, deprive the other party of their power of excepting within the ten days. (28 Barb., 462.) The 32d rule requires the finding to be in the decision.
The plaintiff, having “ failed to recover a more favorable judgment” than that offered by the defendant, is not only barred of his costs subsequent to the offer, “ but must pay the defendant’s costs from the time of the offer.” (Code, § 385 ; Schneider v. Jacobi, 1 Duer, 694; Kilts v. Seeber, 10 How. Pr., 270 ; Budd v. Jackson, 26 How. Pr., 398; Burnett v. Westfall, 15 How. Pr., 420.)
opposed, produced the certificate of the referee that the offers of judgment had been submitted to him, [26]*26and had been considered by him in awarding costs to the plaintiff; that the interest on the sum offered, $984. 94, from the 1st Sept., 1862, to the date of the offer, Dec. 13, .1862, amounted to $19.72, making the total $1,004 66 ; and that, having reported $1,083.90 due the plaintiff, he had also awarded costs to him.
[25]*25At any rate, no injury can arise from requiring the referee now to make a special report.
Motion granted ; costs to abide the event.
[26]*26An offer of judgment does not carry interest beyond the time of the offer, and is not, in that request, like a verdict or report of referees. (Code, § 310.) Having obtained a report for more than the offer amounted to, with interest to the date of the offer," the plaintiff has recovered a more favorable judgment, and is entitled to the costs of the action.
The referee had nothing to do with the offer of judgment. It was not properly before him, and the plaintiff’s counsel had no right to submit it to him, for' any . purpose. Hot having been accepted, as provided by the Code, it was deemed withdrawn. It could not thereafter be offered in evidence, and was only available, in the event of a claim by the defendant for costs. Besides, the referee’s principle of computation was wrong. • Had the plaintiff given notice of the" acceptance of the offer, he might have entered judgment at any time. • There is nothing in the statute requiring him to act upon it promptly, except to give notice of acceptance, anymore than upon a verdict or a referee’s report. He might have kept it in his desk until* the 26th day of July, 1865, and then entered judgment for $1,185.26, with costs to the time of the offer. He" has forced the defendant to incur large expenses to resist an unjust claim, and it is but right he should pay them.
On the 13th day of December, 1862, the defendant offered to allow the plaintiff to take judgment for $984.94, with interest from 1st September, 1862. The plaintiff did not accept the offer, but went on with the action, and on the 26th July, 1865, obtained a report for $1,083.90. If the plaintiff had accepted the defendant’s offer, and entered up his judgment in December, 1862, for the amount offered, the judgment would have been entered, and the amount, in July, 1865, with interest added, wmuld have exceeded $1,150. It is very clear, therefore, that if the plaintiff had acted on the offer, he would have recovered more than he has now.
It is objected by the plaintiff that the offer does not carry [27]*27interest until the judgment is entered up. . Even conceding this to be so (which I do not admit), still the plaintiffs should have accepted the offer and entered up his judgment.
If he may let his action remain quiet, and does not proceed with it for a year or two, the whole object of the law would be defeated, by adding the' interest to the claim, and thereby making it larger than it was when the offer was made. Such was not the intent of the law. The true inquiry is, whéther the amount recovered, deducting the interest, is more, than the defendant admitted in his offer. The referee has nothing to do with the question of costs.
The motion must be granted.
Order accordingly.
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1 Abb. Pr. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tilman-v-keane-nysupct-1865.