Judges: Betts
Filed Date: 10/15/1906
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
On the 24th day of January, 1906, application herein was made t« a Special Term of this court at Brooklyn on an affidavit of Oora Gardner, reciting in substance that Andrew A'. White, an attorney and counselor at law practicing his profession in the city of Binghamton in this State, was employed by her in the year 1901 to collect certain moneys and demands due her from one Major, amormting to the sum of $427.31, and to pay one James Munn $250 thereof and the balance to applicant, Gardner; that the full amount was collected, only $25 paid to Munn and $35 to the affiant Gardner, and that the balance, amounting to $367.31, White refused to pay over although the same had been demanded; and on this affidavit an order was made directing said White to pay to said Gardner or to W. T. Shaw, her attorney, said $367.31, with interest from January 24, 1905,.or show cause a.t the Special Term of this court at Goshen, February 10, 1906, why an attachment should not issue against him. This order was served upon White. He appeared as his attorney in person, filed cer- " tain preliminary objections' to the motion, which being overruled, certain affidavits of said White were filed in which he denied having been at any time the attorney in the matter referred to for the said Cora Gardner, or ever having collected any funds for her therein, or ever having made any payments to her on that account or to any other person' by her direction and, further, that no demand for payment of the money specified in the order was made upon him. Accompanying his affidavit was an affidavit of George W. -Major, who it was alleged was to make the payments in question; and he stated that the contract in question was in possession of one H. H. Horton, a real estate agent, and that he, Major, was to make the payments to the said Horton and did so and received receipts for the payments signed by said Horton, and that said White received some payments for said Horton when Horton was out of his office, but that the
Subsequently hearings were had before Watts, the referee, and later, and on April 17th, Watts reported in substance that Cora Gardner and White as her attorney and counsel agreed that he should collect $395 from George W. Major and pay to one Munn, for Cora Gardner, $250, and the balance thereof he should pay to Gardner; that White as the attorney for the said Gardner collected said $395 and $32 interest, making $427, paying to James Munn therefrom $50' and to Cora Gardner under said agreement $35, leaving in his hands $342, which sum he, the referee, found due to said Cora Gardner, and that White refused to pay the same over to her, and that, in his opinion, White was guilty of contempt of court. This report of the referee was not served upon White by Mrs. Gardner or any one in her behalf; but upon it a notice of motion was made returnable at a Special Term held at Mew Rochelle, Westchester county, April 28, 1906, for confirmation of this report. An admission of service of a copy of this referee’s report and notice of motion was signed by one John B. Swezey, claiming to act as at-, torney for Mr. White. The notice of motion even was not served on White. The papers submitted before me show that White had always signed the papers prior to this admission of service as attorney in person, and he alleges that Swezey wag simply counsel for him and had no authority to sign an admission of any kind. On this 28th day of April, an attorney
Later application was made for a resettlement of this order, which was had; and, eventually, a commitment was issued under which White was committed to the jail of the county of Steuben from which he was- taken by a writ of habeas corpus before the acting county judge of Steuben county and discharged by the acting county judge on the ground that he could not properly be held in these proceedings. This habeas corpus proceeding is reported (People ex rel. White v. Feenaughty, 51 Misc. Rep. 468) ; a reference is had thereto for a more full and complete report of the various proceedings had in this matter and for the reasons there assigned by the court for the action then taken.
The matter now comes before me on an application made
• I have given some time to the examination of this case and, without passing upon or determining the validity of the order by which Mr. Watts was appointed referee herein or the legal right of the court so to do, or whether the facts sworn to by Mrs. Gardner in her affidavit originally were sufficient to bring White into court in the summary manner in which he was brought in, or whether the evidence produced before the referee justified the report made, I have determined that
The attorney, in any event, is entitled to have first served upon him a certified copy of the order directing him to pay a certain sum of money, before any proceeding can be had against him for contempt for refusing or neglecting to pay it. This was not done in this case, and no pretense of doing so was made. I, therefore, hold that the order adjudging him in contempt and the various resettlements of the same and the commitment issued herein on which he was arrested were invalid, void and of no effect; and an order may be entered, vacating and setting aside the same, with costs to White.
Ordered accordingly.