34 Misc. 2d 824 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1962
The defendant is a Swedish hanking corporation. It has no officers, directors, agents or employees in this country. This action was commenced by attachment of the defendant’s funds in this city. The complaint alleges two causes of action, one in tort and one in contract on a guaranty. The defendant’s answer consists of a general denial and an affirmative defense that the alleged guaranty was conditional and had never become effective.
Some time ago, the plaintiff sought by way of notice to examine the defendant before trial in New York County, where the action is pending. The defendant moved to vacate the notice. The court granted the motion, indicating that the pretrial examination here should be deferred to a date more proximate to the trial and that the plaintiff might, if he wished, proceed by way of written interrogatories.
Asserting that the use of interrogatories is inadequate for his purposes in the prosecution of this action, and the trial of the cause being imminent, the plaintiff now seeks, by way of notice of motion, to require the defendant to appear here so that it may be examined by the plaintiff before the trial. The defendant is still unwilling to submit to such examination in this city and asserts that it does not intend to have any of its personnel here to testify at the trial.
Both parties rely upon Probst v. Frenkel (240 App. Div. 504). The defendant quotes the following from page 505: “ No decision
But, as the plaintiff correctly points out, it was also stated in Probst (240 App. Div. 504, 505) that: “ The plaintiff has shown nothing to indicate that he will be prejudiced by an examination at a later time. The defendant seems willing to submit to an examination shortly before trial. His position is reasonable and fair. The order should be modified to provide that the defendant shall be given notice when the case is reached upon the reserve calendar and required to attend for an examination at least thirty days prior to the date when the case is actually set for trial. Application should be made to the trial justice to fix a date for trial which will allow sufficient time for compliance with the provisions of this order. This is without prejudice to an application by the plaintiff meanwhile to take the testimony by deposition or open commission in lieu of such examination.”
The other cases relied upon by the defendant (Fitzgerald v. Fitzgerald, 262 App. Div. 708; Rochester v. Bergen, 263 App. Div. 733; Kraushaar v. Gross, 270 App. Div. 953; Berwin v. Newman, 267 App. Div. 815; Harris v. Muriel Sportswear, 19 Misc 2d 769) are similarly not in point, because they involved the examination of plaintiffs, and, otherwise, in each instance the court permitted examination by open or closed commission out of the State, or deferred the holding of the examination in this State until immediately prior to the trial date or permitted renewal of the application for examination within the State in the event the witness became available within the State — and that is not the issue now before me for disposition.
Nor do the cases relied upon by the plaintiff resolve the matter (Nederlandsche Petroleum en Asphalt Maatschappij v. Interocean Oil Co., 208 App. Div. 107; Berger v. Van Doorn, 57 N. Y. S. 2d 434; Wallace v. Bacon, 143 App. Div. 211; Drews
That the court has the power to direct a foreign party (even though he be a defendant) to appear here and submit to an examination before trial is not the present problem. (Schoen v. Morgan Trucking Co., 13 A D 2d 622.) The sole issue is one of the appropriate exercise of sound discretion. With that in mind, I have resolved that the controlling facts on the application now before me are that the plaintiff seeks the pretrial examination of a foreign corporation not doing business in this State, which has no officers, directors, agents or employees in this State, which was involuntarily made a defendant in this action by means of the attachment of the defendant’s funds, which seeks no affirmative relief in the suit, which is unwilling to have its representatives appear or submit to examination here, and which represents that it does not intend to have any of them testify upon the trial itself.
I cannot find, in accordance with the plaintiff’s contention, that there was a stipulation that the defendant would submit to an examination in New York or that there was a representation to the court, when the matter first arose, that the defendant would have its foreign witnesses available at the trial. I have said in another connection — and I reiterate here — that whether any party desires to proceed to the trial of a cause without ‘1 live witnesses ” is for the party himself to decide (cf. Wennerholm v. Thiberg, 206 Misc. 755, 756).
In the circumstances, it would, I think, be an abuse of discretion and not in the interests of justice to compel the instant defendant, at its expense, to appear in New York for an examination before trial.