
    Kiegdy Noster, Administratrix, etc., Plaintiff, v. The Metropolitan Street Railway Co., Defendant.
    (Supreme Court, New York Trial Term,
    March, 1900.)
    Contempt — Conduct of person who incites accident cases against corporations and furnishes witnesses false testimony, condemned — He cannot be punished civilly where the corporation succeeds on the trial — Code Civ. Pro., § 14.
    , pphe conduct of an “accident adjuster ”, employing his time in dis- . covering accidents and in inducing the injured to go to a lawyer of ;his selection, in furnishing to. proposed witnesses for the plaintiff, ,■.... -in an'action predicated on the negligence of a street railway corpora- ■ ■ tion,. typewritten statements of false testimony which they were to give, upon the trial, is strongly to be condemned; but where the defendant succeeded upon the trial, the court considered that a motion to punish the “ accident adjuster ” for a civil contempt, under section 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure, must be denied, as his misconduct could not be said to have defeated, impaired, impeded or prejudiced the right of the defendant.
    Motion by defendant to punish Robert J. Irwin for contempt.
    Goodwin, Thompson & Vanderpoel, for motion.
    R. G. Dilworth and Wm. Barnes, for Irwin, in opposition,
   McAdam, J.

The defendant has applied for an order adjudging Robert J. Irwin guilty of contempt for making and delivering to Paul Saffron, George Jenkins and Arthur T. Webb, witnesses who were to testify for the plaintiff, typewritten statements of what they were to swear when called at the trial, said statements being contrary to the truth and having been furnished to aid the plaintiff in obtained a verdict by false and perjured testimony. The charge is a serious one. It appears that the plaintiff, as administratrix of her sister, brought an action to recover twenty-five thousand dollars from the defendant for negligently causing her sister’s death, on the allegation that the motorman stopped the car at Fourth avenue, near Eleventh street, to permit the decedent to alight, and that, without giving her an opportunity to do so, he suddenly started the car, throwing her to the ground, thereby causing her death. The strong preponderance of evidence given at the trial established that the charge of negligence was untrue; that decedent, who was engaged in conversation with her sister, on suddenly discovering the proximity of the car to her home, jumped up in her seat and got on the side step and fell off the car without either signalling the conductor or waiting for the car to come to a standstill. Irwin was in the vicinity of the accident at the time, and, discovering that the girl had been injured, gave her a card containing the name of the attorney who subsequently brought the action, and requested her to place the cause in his hands. Irwin then busied hiiiiself hunting up witnesses to the accident. Irwin testified that his business was that of accident adjuster,” and according to his explanation of the term he devotes his time to discovering accidents and inducing the injured persons to go to a lawyer of his selection, that suit may be brought for damages. Prior to the trial Irwin had prepared typewritten statements for the witnesses Saffron, Jenkins and Webb, containing a succession of events, which, if true, made out a clear case of negligence against the defendant, every fact necessary to a recovery being stated with precision. Webb and Jenkins repudiated the scheme, and testified that the typewritten papers did not contain a statement of the facts as they occurred or as they had detailed' them to Irwin, but that Irwin gave them the papers, telling them to refresh their memories therefrom so as to know what to say at the trial. Each was to have fifty dollars if the case was won or a good settlement had. Irwin admits1 giving the witnesses the typewritten statements, but claims that they conformed to the facts as the witnesses had detailed them to him. It will not do to hold that the witnesses who have testified against Irwin are unworthy of belief; they are the same persons he intended to use as creditable witnesses against the defendant. If they are of bad or even doubtful character Irwin ought to have kept away from them. The methods employed have become so common in Mew York, particularly in negligence cases, that they are tolerated complaisantly, and scarcely made the subject of comment, while in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania the courts have thundered forth their condemnation of accident adjusters, runners and lawyers who through their agency foment litigations, in language too vigorous to be misunderstood. See Maires’ Disbarment, 189 Penn. St. 109. The court believes that the plaintiff’s attorney was imposed upon, and he is exonerated from censure, but the court is bound to disapprove the methods of the adjuster as detrimental to the pure administration of justice. Experience has demonstrated that whether in the police or the higher courts, the runner lends neither dignity nor character to the legal profession, whose members generally suffer more or less from association with him. Irwin was clearly the instigator of the suit, the procurer of the evidence to maintain it, and if the plaintiff had succeeded at the trial, it might have been claimed, with much force, that he was guilty of misconduct, by which the rights of the defendant were defeated, impaired and prejudiced, and hence guilty of a civil contempt. Code of Civil Procedure, § 14. But as the defendant succeeded a.t the trial, such right to punish does not exist under the Code provision. On this ground the application will be denied, but without costs.

Motion denied, without costs.  