Watkins v. Boston & Maine Railroad

127 A. 701, 81 N.H. 363, 1924 N.H. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 A. 701 (Watkins v. Boston & Maine Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 127 A. 701, 81 N.H. 363, 1924 N.H. LEXIS 51 (N.H. 1924).

Opinion

Allen, J.

1. The defendant’s first ground of exception is that there can be no judgment against it for the receiver’s liability.

*364 The original cause of action was against the defendant’s receiver for personal injuries resulting from the receiver’s alleged negligence under the federal employers’ liability law. The judgment in the receiver’s favor was entered December 19, 1919. The receiver was appointed by the federal district court of Massachusetts in 1916. A decree discharging the receivership was entered November 29, 1919. By its terms, to take effect on December 1, 1919, among others, the estate in the receiver’s hands was ordered turned over to the defendant on the condition of its filing its stipulation to “be bound by all the terms and conditions of the order”; the defendant was to “assume all the obligations and liabilities” of the receiver and save him harmless therefrom, and was to “assume in its own name the prosecution or defense of all suits” then “pending in which said receiver as such” was “a party,” and protect and save him harmless “from all liability for any judgments” recovered in such suits and for costs and expenses incurred in such prosecution or defense, “whether incurred before or after the discharge” of the receivership. The terms provided for the defendant’s assumption of other liabilities and obligations of the receiver. The decree also provided that the receiver give notice by publication that claims against him should be presented by February 1, 1920, or the claimants “be barred from prosecuting them in these proceedings,” and that the defendant should pay such claims so far as allowed. The stipulation of the defendant was filed and the notice about claims published, so as to make the decree operative. The petition for a new trial was filed February 6, 1920.

The defendant’s position is that since the plaintiff after February 1, 1920, could not present his claim for a new trial against the receiver, he could not bring a petition for it against the defendant, on the theory that the defendant could not be substituted for the receiver in the litigation by the effect and operation of the federal decree, but could only be made an additional party to it under principles of intervention, which by the operation of the decree are not available.

The receivership was instituted on a creditors’ petition. In its discharge, the federal decree is construed as intending to protect rather than defeat claimants fairly entitled to litigate their claims. Its general scheme carefully and fully provided this protection. ' Its provisions already cited, without reference to others, are sufficient to manifest it, and language could hardly be clearer and stronger to show its purpose for the defendant’s" stipulation to bind it to take care of the receiver’s liabilities of every possible nature. The pro *365 vision that as to pending suits the defendant was to assume in its own name their prosecution or defense according as the receiver was plaintiff or defendant, coupled with the discharge of the receivership without waiting for their outcome, clearly and obviously meant that the defendant was to take the receiver’s place in such suits as his substitute.

The plaintiff was a party to the receivership suit. The jurisdiction of the federal court in the suit included authority to determine how claimants against the receiver might proceed to establish their claims and what should be done to pay such as were established. The appearance or non-appearance of the plaintiff was immaterial, except as the decree made it otherwise. He was bound by the burdens of the decree on him and entitled to its benefits to him. The defendant was likewise bound and entitled. The plaintiff’s failure to present his claim in the suit barred his rights against the receiver. But the decree gave him the right to continue to final judgment his original action in this state against the receiver, if it was then pending, by permitting the defendant “in its own name” to defend it, and to a judgment against the defendant on any final verdict he might obtain in that action. The defendant as a party to the suit and by its formal stipulation consenting to such an obligation as a part of the price for the return of its property is estopped from action contrary to its obligation. Both the plaintiff and defendant being parties to the suit, the relations between them as established by the deciee were direct and personal. The decree created substantive rights for the plaintiff and corresponding duties for the defendant, enforceable without the intervention of a third party by reason of such direct relations between them.

It is not a situation of holding that the defendant may be treated as the original tortfeasor but merely that its judicially established liability to assume responsibility, if injury is proved, may be enforced. It is not a case of transfer or assignment of liability. It is not a case of A enforcing B’s obligation to C to stand behind C in his liability to A, but it enforces an obligation in a situation in which both parties were legally participants. The decree in fixing the rights and duties of the parties between each other is analogous to a contract between them.

The Massachusetts cases cited by the defendant are not in point. In Graves v. Railroad, 246 Mass. 459, the action was not pending when the federal decree was entered and hence the decree was not applicable to it. In Tobin v. Railway, 185 Mass. 337, it was held *366 that the decree in the receivership suit therein involved did not authorize the determination of the receiver’s liabilities in other courts. The action was not brought in the first instance against the receivers, and no such question of construction of the federal decree as is here presented was there raised.

It remains to be considered if the petition for a new trial is of and in a suit to which the receiver was a party, within the scope of the federal decree.

The new trial if granted is a new trial of the action originally brought. P. S., c. 230, s. 5, provides: “Whenever a new trial is granted, the action shall be brought forward on the docket of the court, and .shall be tried as if no judgment had been rendered therein.” The judgment is vacated and the action reinstated.

The original action had not gone to judgment when the federal decree was entered and it was in every- sense then pending. When it went to judgment the judgment was not final. Between the entry of judgment and the granting of the new trial it was subject to being vacated, which shows its necessary lack of finality. While it was final unless something happened to it, that qualification made its finality conditional rather than absolute. There may be a period of apparent and assumed finality, sufficient to justify execution on it, but it is not actual and real while the rights of the defeated party to attack its validity can be successfully maintained.

The petition for- a new trial is a separate proceeding only in the manner it is brought. Substantially it not only relates to but is a part of the original action. That it begins as a separate proceeding when brought after judgment is entered does not make it an independent one and does not affect its essential connection as incidental and belonging to the original action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 A. 701, 81 N.H. 363, 1924 N.H. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-boston-maine-railroad-nh-1924.