30 Misc. 2d 464 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1961
In this action to foreclose a mortgage there are three motions before the court. One motion (the second one) is a motion by plaintiff to amend its complaint nunc pro tunc to include an allegation that plaintiff is a domestic corporation. Plaintiff claims that the complaint inadvertently omitted this allegation. Buie 93 of the Buies of Civil Practice provides that such an allegation must be included where the plaintiff is a corporation. However, an omission of this allegation is not ordinarily fatal to the pleading (Ochs v. Frey, 47 App. Div. 390), for such allegation is generally no part of the cause of action (Harmon v. Vanderbilt Hotel Co., 79 Hun 392, affd. 143 N. Y. 665) but is simply descriptive of the party, relating to its character or capacity (Ochs v. Frey, supra; Fox v. Erie Preserving Co., 93 N. Y. 54). If the cause of action was dependent upon this fact, the pleading might be deemed insufficient (Adams v. Lamson Cons. Store-Service Co., 59 Hun 127; Fraser v. Granite State Provident Assn., 8 Misc. 7) but, since plaintiff was in fact a domestic corporation when the pleading was prepared, the omission to include the allegation is not fatal. The motion to amend is in all respects granted and the complaint is deemed amended to include such an allegation (Guarantee Trust Co. v. Philadelphia, Reading & New England R. R. Co., 160 N. Y. 1; Mohrmann v. Kob, 291 N. Y. 181). The second motion by plaintiff is to strike out defendants’ answer. This motion too is granted since the court finds that the defenses interposed by the defendant are insufficient, sham and frivolous. Defendants’ defense to this action of foreclosure is a defense of merger. This defense is untenable. There was no merger of a greater and lesser estate into Yera Fried as one of the predecessors in title of the bond and mortgage. Such merger can only take place where one and the same person acquires both estates, in which case the lesser of the two estates is merged into the greater (Matter of