Judges: Flannery
Filed Date: 5/22/1951
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The defendant, Ruth Tron, moves under section 211-a of the Civil Practice Act to enforce contribution from the defendant Carroll A. Thime of one half of each of two judgments rendered against them both as joint tort-feasors, one in favor of plaintiff, Nettie Tron, and the other in favor of plaintiff,
The defendant, Carroll A. Thime, opposes the entry of a judgment upon the theory that he was not in pari delicto but a passive tort-feasor, and that the defendant, Ruth Tron, who has paid the judgments was an active tort-feasor, attempting, thus, to introduce into the principles underlying the enactment and enforcement of section 211-a of the Civil Practice Act the distinctions between active and passive tort-feasance effective in the third-party practice under section 193-a of the Civil Practice Act. His counsel alleges that the testimony at the trial disclosed that Ruth Tron was the active tort-feasor and that the negligence of Carroll A. Thime was, if anything, passive and asserts that in these circumstances the law does not apply the rule laid down in section 211-a of the Civil Practice Act. He, then, says that the defendant, Ruth Tron, on this motion has not sustained the burden of proof that the defendants are in pari delicto laid upon her by the section under discussion.
Whatever the relations between the joint tort-feasor defendants here may have been the court believes that the defendant, Tron, has an absolute right to the entry of the judgment. It is true there are precedents sustaining the position of the defendant, Thime, on this motion. However, the court believes that they were erroneous and rests its conclusion upon the decision of the Court of Appeals in Neenan v. Woodside Astoria Transp. Co. (261 N. Y. 159). There, Huppmann, the owner and operator of an automobile, had sued the transportation company for personal injuries suffered in a collision between his automobile and a bus of the transportation company and had recovered a judgment against it for over $2,000. Later, Mary Keenan, a passenger in the bus, had sued both Huppmann and the transportation company and recovered a judgment against both for the sum of $1,500. The courts held that the judgment between Huppmann and the transportation company, since it was not res judicata as against the plaintiff Keenan in that action, was not even competent evidence as between Huppmann and the transportation company in the Keenan action and had been properly excluded.
This, then, is the device, by which a person duly adjudged as between himself and another to have been guilty of no negligence was required to contribute proportionately to the payment of a judgment rendered against both him and the other in a separate action brought by a third person, and if one defendant who has been adjudged as between himself and another defendant to be guilty of no negligence at all contributing to an accident may, thus, be obligated in another action by a third party to contribute his proportionate share of a judgment rendered against both, surely the position of a joint defendant who is merely a passive instead of an active tort-feasor can be no better. Buth Tron, then, as a joint defendant who has paid judgments against herself and her joint defendant, Thime, rendered against
Submit order.