Citation Numbers: 36 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 301
Judges: Brady, Daniels, Davis
Filed Date: 2/15/1883
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
At the time of his release the attorney had been in custody for the period of three months and two days for the non-payment of a 'fine of $1,100 imposed upon him by way of punishment for a con tempt. It is not necessary to inquire whether he could be lawfully released under section 2286 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for by chapter 9 of. the Laws of 1843 similar authority was given to the court over cases of this description. Under one or the other the court certainly, in a proper case, has the power to relieve the person imprisoned. But for the purpose of entitling him to such relief it is required to be shown that the party imprisoned is either unable to endure the imprisonment or to pay the sum required by him to be paid. It was not shown that Steinert was unable to ' endure further imprisonment. All that was stated in his affidavit was that he was unwell and feared that longer imprisonment would permanently injure his health. This was very far from showing that he could not endure further imprisonment; and it was not asserted for that purpose, but merely as a reason why an order should be made allowing the motion to be brought on without giving the usual notice. The real ground, upon which the affidavit disclosed it to be the purpose upon which to apply for his discharge, was the inability of the attorney to obtain' the money required to make payment of the fine.' And what he said Upon this subject was that he had no means with which to pay it, and that his relatives were not in such pecuniary circumstances as to enable them to make the payment for him. This was substantially the statement upon which he was discharged from imprisonment. It was made without detail or any corroboration whatever and proceeded from the party himself, whose misconduct appears' to have been of no common character, and by the opinion given on the determination of his case it certainly should not have been credited (Matter of Steinert, 24 Hun, 246), for it was then made to appear that “ he had been guilty of several criminal offenses in his efforts to retain the moneys collected by him,” and as a mere 'matter of punishment it was due to the proper administration and observance of professional •obligations and good conduct that the imprisonment should hare been prolonged beyond the time to which it was allowed to extend.
When the attachment was issued upon which the attorney was
The order should be reversed and the motion denied and the attorney recommitted to prison unless he shall enter into a bond, with one or more sufficient sureties, for the payment of the fine imposed upon him in three equal yearly installments, which will afford him a longer period for that purpose than the one mentioned by him in his affidavit as necessary.
Order reversed, motion denied. Order entered as directed in opinion.