Westervelt v. Shapiro

132 N.Y.S. 338
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedDecember 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 N.Y.S. 338 (Westervelt v. Shapiro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westervelt v. Shapiro, 132 N.Y.S. 338 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

LEHMAN, J.

The appellant, Sophie Shapiro, has been adjudged guilty of contempt in failing to appear in answer to a subpoena and testify in supplementary proceedings brought against her husband as judgment debtor. When the motion to punish her for contempt was made, she demanded a reference, which was then ordered on consent upon the question whether or not the subpoena was served upon her. After the reference had proceeded some time, she failed to appear, at one of the hearings. The reference was then concluded, and she was [340]*340adjudged in contempt. She then moved to open her default, and it was opened upon terms which she accepted. The reference was then continued, and at its close the referee decided that the subpoena was served upon her. Then for the first time she raised the point that the supplementary proceedings had terminated before the subpoena was issued, and that the court had no jurisdiction to issue the subpoena, and moved to vacate the subpoena. This motion was denied, and the appeal from this order must be decided before we can take up the appeal from the order adjudging her in contempt.

It appears that, after the examination of the judgment debtor in these supplementary proceedings was concluded, a motion was made in the presence of the debtor for the appointment of a receiver, and at the foot of the judgment debtor’s deposition the following memorandum was indorsed by the justice sitting in Special Term without objection from the judgment debtor:

“The examination of the judgment debtor is concluded, but the proceeding is left open for the examination of other witnesses. Dated, May 12, 1910. P. S., J. C. C.”

It is the appellant’s claim that this indorsement constituted no adjournment under section 2444 of the Code, and that the proceedings then terminated by failure to adjourn.

I do not think that it is necessary for us to decide in this case whether this indorsement did or did not constitute a proper adjournment.

[1] If the proceedings did not terminate by a failure to adjourn, then, even if this indorsement is not sufficient to constitute an adjournment, the court still kept jurisdiction over the proceedings, and any defect in the proceedings would constitute only an irregularity. If there was only an irregularity in the proceedings, then, after the appellant appeared, demanded a reference, and proceeded with the reference until hundreds of pages of testimony were taken without making any objection to the regularity of the proceedings, she has waived this irregularity, and submitted herself to the jurisdiction of the court. The denial of the motion to vacate the subpoena was therefore proper if the supplementary proceedings were then still pending.

[2] The appellant cites as authority for her contention the case of Thomas v. Kerika, 15 Abb. Prac. (N. S.) 342, and that case does hold that under the Code provisions as they then stood proceedings supplementary to execution terminated, unless they were adjourned or extended as provided by law. In view, however, of the enactment of section 2454 of the Code, that case is no longer regarded as authority. This distinction was pointed out in an opinion by Mr. Justice Giegerich at Special Term in the case of Schwarmeile v. Glenny, 54 Misc. Rep. 36, 103 N. Y. Supp. 499. The rule seems now well established that supplementary proceedings, even though actually abandoned, do not fall of their own weight, but can be terminated only by entry of a subsequent order. See Rothschild v. Gould, 84 App. Div. 196, 82 N. Y. Supp. 558; Crystal v. Crystal, 120 N. Y. Supp. 50.

The order denying the motion to vacate the subpoena should therefore be affirmed, with costs to the respondent.

[3] Upon the appeal from the order adjudging her in contempt, [341]*341the appellant first raises the point that the evidence shows that she was not served with a subpoena. If that question came before us as an original question, I should, perhaps, have such doubt as to whether the appellant or her cousin was the person actually served that I should hesitate before adjudging the appellant in contempt. The matter was, however, threshed out at numerous hearings before a referee of experience who has seen the witnesses and determined partly from the manner and appearance of the appellant’s witnesses that their testimony is not to be relied upon. His report has been accepted by the trial justice who has also seen the most important witnesses, and I do not feel that their determination can be reversed upon appeal without substituting our judgment upon the facts for the judgment of the court at Special Term.

It is true that the finding that the appellant was served rests practically upon the sole testimony of one witness, and that witness is a professional process server and detective, whose fee is dependent upon his service of the person named in the process, and whose testimony must therefore be closely scrutinized. It is also true that his testimony is contradicted directly by the appellant, who says she was never served, and by her cousin, who lives with her, and says that the subpoena was served not upon the appellant, but upon herself in appellant’s absence from her apartment. It is inferentially contradicted by a brother of this cousin, who says that appellant was not in the apartment at the time of' the alleged service, and also by the appellant’s husband, sister, brother, and mother, and by á friend of her husband and a chauffeur, who all testify that upon the evening when the alleged service was made the appellant was in their company at dinner at her mother’s home, and after dinner driving in an automobile.

[4] Numerical preponderance of witnesses is, of course, not conclusive upon an issue of fact. Nevertheless the testimony of such-an array of witnesses should not be disregarded in favor of one witness, unless there is reasonable ground to discredit their testimony.

The manner and appearance of witnesses is very material, but I should hesitate to accept the referee’s determination solely upon his judgment of these witnesses’ credibility based upon their manner and appearance, unless other reasonable grounds for discrediting their testimony appear in the record. In examining their testimony, we must remember that, since nine months have passed between the date of the alleged service of the subpoena and the closing of the hearings before the referee, there may naturally be some discrepancies upon immaterial points in the testimony of the various witnesses. On the other hand, the question of who was the party served arose within four days of the alleged service, and at that time all the witnesses were informed of the necessity of remembering that the appellant was in their company at the time of the service, and there is therefore no improbability in their being able to remember distinctly what they did in appellant’s company on that date, although they could not remember what they had done upon any other exact date about the same time.

In spite, however, of these considerations I do not think that the [342]*342determination of the referee that he should disregard their testimony is unreasonable. He has found that the testimony of the process server was given in a manner to demand belief, and, though there are some discrepancies between an affidavit made by him shortly after the alleged service and his testimony before the referee, these discrepancies are not very material.

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.Y.S. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westervelt-v-shapiro-nyappterm-1911.