
    Jacob R. Shipherd, App’lt, v. Charles B. Crowell, Resp’t.
    
      (Supreme Court, Appellate Division,. Second Department,
    
    
      Filed February 4, 1896.)
    Trial—Stipulation.
    A stipulation for the discontinuance of an action and for the surrendei of certain letters written by one of the parties, on entry of a judgment in, or the discontinuance of. another action, is not enforceable as to the surrender of the letters, where such action was not discontinued and no ■ judgment entered therein.
    Appeal from a judgment for defendant, entered on a decision dismissing the complaint on plaintiff’s opening.
    D. 0. Calvin, for app’lt; McKoon & Luckey, for resp’t.
   BARTLETT, J.

—This is a suit in equity, the main purpose of which was to prevent the defendant from prosecuting a pending action for divorce against his wife, so far as that action involved any charges of misconduct against the plaintiff herein, and also to secure the surrender to the plaintiff of certain letters written by him, which the defendant, Charles B. Crowell, intended to use in his divorce suit against his wife. The complaint sho’ws that Mr. Crowell had sued Mr. Shipherd for alienating Mrs. Crowell’s affections, in an action which was pending at the same time as the divorce suit, already mentioned. Before the causes were reached for trial the parties entered into a stipulation, which provided, among other things, for the discontinuance of the suit which Mr. Crowell had brought against Mr. Shipherd, and contained the the following paragraph in regard to the letters to which refererence has already been made : “All letters written by defendant, Shipherd, together with any wrappers containing them, which are the subject in part of the actions of Crowell v. Crowell and Crow-ell v. Shipherd, after the trial of the case of Crowell v. Crowell, shall be thereafter destroyed in the presence of the attorneys for the parties, and all such letters, etc., shall be-.produced for such purpose.” This provision was subsequently modified, so as to require the letters, instead of being- destroyed, to be delivered to Mr. Shipherd or his attorney within three days after judgmemt in the divorce suit of Crowell v. Crowell, of within three days after the discontinuance of that suit, if it should be discontinued. The plaintiff’s alleged grievance in the present case is that the Crowell divorce suit was not brought'in good faith, and that no attempt has been made in good faith to bring it to trial; that the attorneys for Mr. Crowell have been persistently publishing, through the newspapers and otherwise, false and injurious statements concerning him and Mrs. Crowell; that, when he consented to the stipulation concerning the letters, he did so only upon' the assurance or the attorneys for Mr. Crowell that the divorce suit would be brought to immediate trial and that his letters would be immediately surrendered. All these statements, however, if true, do not give plaintiff any cause of action for such relief as he seeks in the case at bar. His rights must be measured by the stipulation into which he entered, and that, so far as its contents are disclosed in the complaint, contains no provision binding Mr. Crowell or his attorneys to bring the divorce suit to trial at any particular time. So far as Mr. Shipherd’s letters are concerned, the necessary implication, from the language used, in the stipulation, is that they are to remain in the hands of Mr. Crowell until the lapse of three days after the final disposition of the action for divorce. In view of this portion of the agreement, it is of no importance whether it be true or not, as alleged in the thirteenth subdivision of the complaint, that Mr. Crowell’s possession of those letters was unlawfully acquired, in the first instance. His right to retain them was recognized by the stipulation. The complaint was properly dismissed, and the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.  