1 N.Y.S. 772 | Superior Court of Buffalo | 1888
This action was commenced in the municipal court of Buffalo to recover the balance due upon a contract to furnish plans and specifications for a house and barn to be erected upon defendant’s premises. The preparation of the plans and specifications was alleged in the complaint : that the services were reasonably worth the sum of $425; that there had been paid .thereon the sum of $125, leaving a balance due of $300, for which judgment was demanded. The defendant joined issue, and filed an answer in which, among other things, he pleaded as a bar the pendency of another action in the .supreme court, between the same parties, for the same cause of action, as set forth in the pleadings in this action. Upon the trial it was admitted by plaintiff that an action was pending, at the time of the commencement of this action, in the supreme court, in which the defendant herein is plaintiff and the plaintiff herein is defendant. It was further admitted that the $125 referred to in plaintiff’s complaint herein was the same as referred to in the complaint in the action in the supreme court, and that the plans and specifi•cations referred to in both actions are the plans and specifications forming the subject of litigation in both suits. Therefore the judge entered judgment of .nonsuit against plaintiff. The return is extremely meager and unsatisfactory. While the complaint in the supreme court was introduced in evidence, yet it was not returned, nor can it be gathered from the return what the issues in ■the supreme court were, nor what defense the answer interposed. From the statement of counsel, upon the argument, and from the briefs submitted, in which they seem to agree, it appears that in the supreme court plaintiff alleged in his complaint a breach of contract upon the part of the defendant in failing to furnish the plans and specifications contracted for, and sought to recover back the $125 paid to defendant on account thereof. The defendant ‘.therein admitted receiving the $125; also, the demand of repayment and refusal to pay; then alleged that money was paid for work, labor, and services performed in preparing the said plans and specifications. For a second answer defendant denied all the other allegations in the complaint. Treating these as the issues between the parties, it is clear that the pendency of the action in the supreme court was no bar to maintaining this action.
Titus, J,, concurs. Beckwith," C. J., dissents.