Walsh v. Walsh

33 A.D. 579
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 33 A.D. 579 (Walsh v. Walsh) 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
Walsh v. Walsh, 33 A.D. 579 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The defendant and his brother, Thomas Walsh, were for several years partners in the business of constructing piers, docks, etc. On the 16th of September, 1895, Thomas Walsh died, leaving a will, in which the plaintiff was named as sole executrix. On the theory that she was entitled to a larger share of the copartnership property than the defendant was willing to allow her, the plaintiff commenced this action,-the points in controversy being shown in-the complaint and answer. The action progressed to a point where a referee was named to hear and determine, when the plaintiff decided that it was not profitable to continue the litigation. She thereupon directed her attorney to pay the costs of the' action,' and to discontinue the same; and, acting upon these instructions, the attomey applied to a Special Term of this court .and obtained ex parte an order of discontinuahce. This order.was duly served upon the defendant’s attorneys, and a motion was made to vacate the order of discontinuance. An order was made denying this motion, from which the defendant brings an appeal to this court.

It is conceded that as a general proposition the plaintiff has, a right to discontinue an action on the payment of costs; but it is urged in the present case that the defendant having set up an affirmative defense in the nature of a counterclaim, he is entitled to the protection of a judgment which shall dispose of the controversy. .We are unable to discover anything which would justify this court in interfering with the discretion exercised by the Special [581]*581Term, in granting the order of discontinuance. “ In ordinary actions,” say the court in Matter of Lasak, (131 N. Y. 624), “ it is not always the absolute right of a plaintiff to discontinue his action. In all cases where a defendant becomes an actor and is interested in the continuance and trial of the action, as where he sets up a counterclaim or sets up a claim to property which is in litigation, and asks in his answer affirmative relief in reference thereto, he may resist the discontinuance of the action, and then it rests in the discretion of the court whether or not the plaintiff shall be permitted to discontinue it.” This is the condition in the case at bar, and in the absence of facts establishing that, the defendant is'deprived of some substantial right by reason of the discontinuance, it does not seem to be the duty of this department to interfere with the discretion exercised by the Special Term.

“Ordinarily,” say the court in Matter of Butler (101 N. Y. 307), “ a suitor has a right to discontinue any action or proceeding commenced by him, and his reasons for so doing are of no concern to the court. A party should no more be compelled to continue a litigation than to commence one, except where substantial rights of other parties have accrued, and injustice will be done to them by permitting the discontinuance. In such a case, through the control which the court exercises over thé entry of its order, there is discretion to refuse; but where there are no such facts, and nothing appears to show a violation of the right or interest •of the adverse party, the plaintiff may discontinue, and a refusal of leave becomes merely arbitrary and without any basis upon which discretion can exist.” In the case at bar the defendant is deprived of no righthe stands exactly where he would have stood had no action been commenced; and the mere possibility that the plaintiff may, at a future time; bring a new action upon the same grounds, is not sufficient to-justify this court in reversing the order of the court below. As was said in Matter of Butler (supra): “All costs of the discontinued proceeding are to be paid, and have been tendered. The defendant acquired no new rights. He is left precisely in the position he would have been in if the proceeding in-the Common. Pleas had never been commenced, and the action in the Supreme Court alone had been brought. Would that action have unnecessarily harassed him ? We can see no just basis for the refusal of [582]*582leave to discontinue upon which any discretion was called into exercise, or could operate.”

The cases relied upon by the defendant will be found, upon examination, to be confined to matters in which the defendant has substantial rights which must be sacrificed by a'discontinuance, or where the peace and good order of the community are involved. In the case of Iselin v. Smith (62 Hun, 221) the plaintiff had fenced in what he claimed to be his private road, which ran in front of the premises of the defendants. The fence shut the defendants off from the road and they tore it down. The plaintiff commenced an action to restrain the defendants from interfering with the fence. The defendants, answering, asserted a right to the use of the road because the road was a public highway, and asked for an injunction restraining the plaintiff from constructing the fence. The plaintiff asked leave to discontinue the action upon the payment of the costs and disbursements, and the leave wás granted. The defendants appealed, and the court say : The plaintiff ought not to be permitted to discontinue his action unless, upon stipulation, to never again close the defendants from access to the road. If he is not willing to do this, let the defendants have an opportunity, under the answer, to prove their defense and get an affirmative judgment.” • This decision was evidently dictated by considerations of public policy, rather than the rights of the individual defendants, and the court was justified, no doubt, in exercising its discretion in favor of the defendants, but there are no such conditions in the casé at bar. There is nothing to be lost to the defendant by reason of any delay in reaching an adjudication should he see fit to commence an action for the, purpose, and we see no reason why the plaintiff should not be permitted to withdraw from the, present litigation upon the payment of the costs.

In the case of Van Alen v. Schermerhorn (14 How. Pr. 287) an "order discontinuing an action was refused where a counterclaim had been set up,' against which the Statute of Limitations would be a ' bar, if the suit was discontinued.

In the case of Carleton v. Darcy (75 N. Y. 375) the plaintiff had _ succeeded in getting possession of premises from a tenant by virtue of a judgment. The defendant paid the costs and took a new trial under the statute. The plaintiff, still in the possession of the prop-, erty, asked leave to discontinue the action, and this was denied. [583]*583On the appeal the court sustained the court below. After stating the facts the court say : But it is quite different when he has got all that his action could give him, and has put the defendants to the need of that further litigation which the law allows them, to maintain what they think is their right, for him then to discontinue his action and throw the burden of the affirmation of another issue upon the defendants. The court might well require him to pursue the action that he had commenced, until a definite and final result was reached in it, settling positively the right of possession of the lands in dispute. We, therefore, think that the court below, in making the orders appealed from, did not abuse or exceed their discretion.”

The same doctrine was asserted in Matter of Waverly Water Works Co. (85 N. Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 A.D. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-walsh-nyappdiv-1898.