Court Opinion

ID: 6140518
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:38:08.401746+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:37.273677
License: Public Domain

Van Hoesen, J.
This court decided, in Pearl v. Robitschek (2 Daly, 138), that a judgment debtor, who, in good faith, and with no intention to defraud the plaintiff’s attorney of his costs, settles the judgment, is entitled to have the judgment record satisfied of record, notwithstanding the judgment creditor may not have paid his attorney’s costs. To prevent a judgment debtor from paying both costs and damages to the judgment creditor, notice to him not to make such payment is indispensable. The notice may be either express or implied. In this case, no notice of any kind was ever given to the defendant. A sort of notice was given to his attorneys, for when they applied to Mr. Thain, the plaintiff’s attorney, for an extension of the time to answer, he added to the proposed consent a written notice that no settlement could be made without providing for his lien as plaintiff’s attorney in the action. That notice was returned by the defendant’s attorneys to Mr. Thain without his being aware of its contents. There is no question, therefore, of the bona fides of the defendant in settling with the plaintiff; and the single point of inquiry is, Whether notice to the defendant’s attorney of the existence of the plaintiff’s attorney’s lien is to be regarded as notice to the defendant. Rule 10 of the old Supreme Court provided that when an attorney has given notice of retainer, all papers *64in the course of the cause must be served upon him or his agent (Graham’s Pr. 711). Section 417 of the Code provides that where a party shall have an attorney the service of papers shall be made upon the attorney, instead of the party. The papers referred to in the Code are, I think, papers in the course of the cause; papers pertaining to the proceedings of the court. A judgment debtor who settles with the judgment creditor after notice of the attorney’s lien is justly deemed guilty of an attempt to defraud the attorney. In order to expose the party to such a liability, notice of the existence of the lien ought to be brought home to him personally. His position is not unlike that of a person against whom an injunction has been granted ; he must be made aware that, an injunction has been issued before he can be punished for its violation. In this case, it appears affirmatively that the defendant himself never had notice of the lien, and it would be inequitable to compel him to pay the judgment, or a large portion of it, a second time.
Van Brunt, J., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.