Town of Wilmurt v. Wright

183 A.D. 305, 36 N.Y. Crim. 487, 171 N.Y.S. 230, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6011
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 1, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 183 A.D. 305 (Town of Wilmurt v. Wright) 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
Town of Wilmurt v. Wright, 183 A.D. 305, 36 N.Y. Crim. 487, 171 N.Y.S. 230, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6011 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Kruse, P. J.:

The appellant is the attorney of record for the plaintiff in the above-entitled action. He has been convicted of criminal contempt for an alleged willful disobedience of two orders made in the action, to aid in the enforcement of a judgment recovered by the plaintiff against the defendant.

The defendant was the former supervisor of the plaintiff town. He failed to pay over to the town moneys which had come into his hands as supervisor belonging to the town. The action was brought to compel him to account and pay over the same. He defended the action unsuccessfully and a judgment was awarded against him amounting to upwards of $6,000.

The judgment required him to pay over the deficiency for which judgment was awarded within a certain time. Instead of enforcing the judgment by execution a motion was made to punish him for a civil contempt in failing to pay over such sum. An order was granted to that effect and the defendant was imprisoned thereon. The order directed that the defendant be committed to the Herkimer county jail, there to remain until he paid over to the plaintiff the sum of [307]*307$6,000 and upwards, unless sooner discharged by the court. He was taken into custody by the sheriff on the 14th day of June, 1917, and committed to the county jail. After he had been in prison a little over a month he offered to voluntarily turn over to the town the sum of $2,535.88 in settlement of the judgment, being the balance in his account at the bank where he had deposited the town funds. The then supervisor of the town and the town board, after considering the proposition and concluding he had no other property and no other means, proposed that if he would turn the same over, to be applied upon the judgment, they would consent to his discharge from imprisonment, under the order adjudging him guilty of contempt.

Thereupon his attorneys applied at Special Term for an order discharging him upon payment of -said sum. His application was denied, but he was permitted to renew the motion upon payment of $30 costs, theretofore awarded by certain prior orders, and the delivery to the county treasurer of Herkimer county of his check for $1,908.42, and to the plaintiff’s attorney another check of $627.45, costs in the action, payable to their order respectively, upon the bank in which he had said credit balance, said checks to be delivered within twenty days after entry of the order and service of a copy, with notice of entry, upon plaintiff’s attorney, and not otherwise.

The order was made on the 18th of August, 1917, and after resettlement was entered in the office of the clerk of Herkimer county on September 25, 1917. The plaintiff’s attorney, the appellant herein, opposed the order, and insisted if such settlement was to be effective, the moneys should be paid to him. But the court refused to make the order in that form. The appellant was dissatisfied with the form of said order and so stated to the defendant and his attorney. He suggested that the matter, being civil in its nature, could be settled between themselves,. and proposed that upon payment to him of $2,535.88 he would sign a stipulation of discontinuance and settlement of the contempt proceeding, and an order could be obtained from any justice releasing defendant.

Without reciting in detail the various conversations and negotiations and interviews, it is enough to say that eventually [308]*308the money was paid by defendant to appellant, who thereupon made a stipulation reciting that said moneys had been paid in reduction of and applied upon the judgment, and stipulating that an order might be granted at any Special Term within the Fifth Judicial District, without notice to him, the plaintiff’s attorney, discharging the defendant from further imprisonment under and by virtue of the order of May twenty-sixth. The appellant himself as attorney for the plaintiff as the order recites presented the stipulation at a Special Term not held by the judge who made the order of August eighteenth, and an order was made discharging the defendant. The appellant did not disclose the previous application and order of August eighteenth.

Thereupon the Supreme Court directed the district attorney of Onondaga county, as he states in his affidavit, to apply, at a Special Term to be held at a time therein stated, for an order directing the appellant to show cause why he should not be punished for criminal contempt for willful disobedience of the lawful mandate of the Supreme Court, and for resistance willfully offered- to a legal mandate of the Supreme Court, and for willfully procuring disobedience and resistance to its lawful mandate.

It does not appear where the Supreme Court was held, or who the judge was who presided, which directed the district attorney of Onondaga county to institute the proceeding, but presumably it was the same justice who granted the order to show cause and who made the order committing the appellant for contempt, denied his application for discharge, and held the Special Term and made the order punishing the defendant for criminal contempt.

Assuming that the court had power to punish the defendant for contempt in failing to pay the amount of the defalcation, I am unable to see why it was not perfectly competent for the parties to agree upon the settlement, which would, release the defendant from imprisonment. He was not in custody on a conviction for criminal contempt, and the supervisor of the town had specifically stated to the appellant that if he could get the $2,535.88 paid to him, the appellant, the town and its officers, as well as nearly every resident of the town, would be perfectly willing that the defendant should be discharged.

[309]*309There is nothing in the record before us which tends to show in the least that the appellant did not have authority from the proper town officers to act for the town and receive the money for his client. The learned counsel for the prosecution frankly admitted upon the argument before us that he did not question the authority of the appellant to act for the town in that behalf..

It is true that the appellant stated that he had other claims against the town than the costs of the action, and it is evident, from the colloquy which took place in court, that the appellant regarded it to his advantage to have the moneys in his hands in getting his-pay. But that was a matter wholly between the town and the appellant, and had no connection whatever with the matter before the court. Indeed, there is nothing to suggest that the officials of the town were not entirely willing that Thomas should take out his claim. Whether that would have been proper we do not know, and the question is not involved in this proceeding.

These were not moneys that had been paid into the court, or under the control of the court. The action was not brought to recover these specific funds. This was a mere credit balance, and even if they had been moneys, the title to which was in the town, the town officers had a perfect right to receive the same. I am not aware that the county treasurer had any authority to receive them. Nothing is pointed out which gave him such right, and if the provision in the order for paying the moneys to him is to be regarded in the nature of a payment into court, I think it was without authority, and the town officers, as well as the attorney for the town, were warranted in resisting such payment to the county treasurer.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A.D. 305, 36 N.Y. Crim. 487, 171 N.Y.S. 230, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-wilmurt-v-wright-nyappdiv-1918.