22 N.Y.S. 761 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1893
The defendant’s principal grievance seems to be that, after both parties had noticed the cause for trial upon the answer served, the plaintiff disregarded such notice on his own part, as well as his adversary’s, and proceeded to demur to one portion of the answer, and, after obtaining judgment in his favor as to that, moved to strike out the rest of the answer as sham, and so disposed of the whole defense before the term for which the case was originally noticed. It seems to be clear under the authorities that the plaintiff might disregard his own notice of trial and his adversary’s, and demur to the latter’s answer if such demurrer were served in time. It has been held that a plaintiff might serve an amended complaint within the time allowed for amendment, of course, notwithstanding that he and his adversary had exchanged notices of trial upon a demurrer to the original complaint, (Clifton v. Brown, 2 Civil Proc. R. 44,) and that a defendant might serve an amended answer within the time allowed by law, notwithstanding both parties had noticed for trial the issues raised by the first answer, (Duyckinck v. Railroad Co., 5 Civil Proc. R. 22.) There is absolutely no difference in principle between these cases and the one before us. Here the plaintiff demurred to the answer within the time allowed by law, and the notices of trial must be deemed to have been given and received in subjection to the exercise of such
The plaintiff’s demurrer to the second defense contained in the answer was properly sustained. The defendant’s.contention is that the matter demurred to did not constitute a separate defense, but the matter is described in the answer as “a further defense,” and the fact that the defendant has not separately numbered it is not controlling upon his adversary. His failure to comply with the Code in that respect cannot be urged in his own favor. While the words “for a further defense” are not controlling where the matter it precedes is not in fact a separate defense, (Thompson v. Kearney, 14 Daly, 342,) yet here there can be no doubt on the subject. The first defense is a denial that the plaintiff is the holder of the note for value, and an averment that the defendant Nylin is still the owner thereof. The second defense is that the note was given to Nylin for accommodation only, without consideration. The latter is new matter, set up as a defense, and is wholly separate from the denial in the first paragraph. As the appellant does not attempt in his brief on this appeal to argue that the matter demurred to constitutes a defense, it is not necessary to discuss that question. He puts his sole objection to the judgment on the ground that the matter demurred to did not attempt to set up a separate defense, but in this we cannot agree with him. After the judgment upon the demurrer had disposed of part of the answer, the remainder, which denied that the plaintiff is the holder of the note for value, and averred that defendant Nylin was still the owner thereof, was struck out as sham upon an affidavit of defendant Nylin, in which he deposes that he did, for value received by him before the maturity of the note, indorse and transfer it to the plaintiff; that the note was not made for accommodation, but given to him by defendant Kohrs in payment of an indebtedness incurred for work in stair building, which he had done for defendant Kohrs on buildings on Madison avenue; that deponent was'indebted to plaintiff for material supplied him in doing the aforesaid work for Kohrs, and also received some cash at the time of indorsing and delivering the note. It therefore appears that the defendant’s answer set up matter which he did not and could not know to be true at the time that the answer was interposed, viz. that the indorsee, Nylin, was still the owner of the note. The denial that the plaintiff was the “holder of the note for value” does not deny that the plaintiff was the holder and owner of the note, and therefore does not put in issue any material allegation of the complaint. The affirmative allegation that Nylin is still the owner of the note is conclusively disproved by Nylin’s affidavit, to which the defendant Kohrs made no reply. After the entry of the interlocutory judgment for costs upon the demurrer the defendant moved to set the same