70 N.Y.S. 24 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This action was brought to recover $25,500 from the appellant, under an agreement made between the appellant as trustee, and the Brussels Tapestry Company, the plaintiff’s assignor. The plaintiff alleges the making of the contract, a copy of which is annexed to the complaint. By this contract the corporation is to have the right within three years from' the date of the agreement, upon giving ninety days’ notice of its intention so to do, to reconvey to the appellant all or any of the lots purchased by the corporation, and the appellant agreed upon such reconveyance to pay to the said corporation the sum of $450 for each lot reconveyed. It is then alleged that on the 6th day of October, 1896, the corporation elected to reconvey to the appellant eighty-five of the said lots, and for that purpose a deed of the said lots was executed by the corpo
The appellant answered and the case was placed upon the calendar for trial. Before the same had reached trial the defendant made a motion for a discovery and inspection of the several instruments the execution of which is alleged in the complaint. That motion was granted to the extent of ordering discovery as to the deed that was alleged to have been tendered by the Brussels Tapestry Company to the appellant, and denied in other respects ; and from this order the appellant appeals.
Rule 14 of the General Rules of Practice provides: “ Either party may be compelled to make any discovery of book, document, record, article or property in his possession or under his control or in the possession of his agent or attorney, upon its appearing to the satisfaction of the court that such book, document, record, article or property is material to the decision of the action or special proceeding or some motion or application therein, or is competent evidence in the case, or an inspection thereof is necessary to enable a party to prepare for trial.” Where the plaintiff’s case is based upon the proper execution of written instruments, especially where executed
The complaint also alleges that after assigning part of its cause of action to the defendant Mayer, the corporation subsequently transferred and assigned to the plaintiff and one Troescher its interest in the cause of action, subject to the right that Mayer had acquired and that Troescher afterwards assigned his interests to the plaintiff. Troescher is not a party to the action, and it would seem essential that the defendant Erhardt should be able to ascertain whether the assignment from Troescher to the plaintiff transferred all of Troescher’s interest under the contract. To enable the defendant Erhardt to prepare properly for trial, it is essential that he should have an opportunity to examine these instruments, so that he could be prepared to meet the case on the part of the plaintiff, which would depend upon the proper execution thereof. Erhardt had no means of knowing by whom they were executed or whether they are in fact valid transfers of the Brussels Tapestry Company’s interest under this contract by which the corporation and Troescher have so parted with their interests as to prevent them from ever maintaining an action upon the contract; and it is apparent that he would be placed at a great disadvantage if at the trial these contracts should be introduced under such formal evidence as would be .sufficient to justify their introduction, and he were not prepared to produce proper evidence to show, if it were a fact, that they were never legally executed by the transferrers. There is no reason shown why a discovery should not be permitted, and the plaintiff can sustain no injury if the transfers were legally executed .so that they actually transferred to the plaintiff the interests which he
I can see no reason why the defendant Erhardt should not have the opportunity to inspect these agreements. As to the agreement upon which the action is brought, Erhardt admits in his answer that he executed it, a copy of which is annexed to the complaint. It does not seem that a discovery as to that instrument is necessary or proper.
There was no laohes in making the application for the inspection of these instruments, as it was only necessary before the trial, so as to give the defendant reasonable time to prepare to meet the evidence offered by the plaintiff, and there can be no injury to the plaintiff by the granting of the application. This is not a case where the mere delay in making the application until it becomes necessary to prepare for trial constitutes such laohes as would justify the denial of the motion.
The order appealed from should, therefore, be modified by granting the application for a discovery as prayed for, except as to the agreement, a copy of which is annexed to the complaint, and as so modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements of the appeal to the appellant.
Van Brunt, P. J., and Rumsey, J., concurred; Hatch, J., dissented.
Order modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, with'ten dollars costs and disbursements to the appellant.