183 A.D. 106 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
The defendant trust company is the successor of the Knickerbocker Trust Company with which it was merged in 1908 and by which merger it assumed all the liabilities of the Knickerbocker Trust Company. The cause of action alleged in plaintiff’s complaint is one to rescind a certain
This order, as I read the authorities, goes a step further than the courts have ever before gone in directing the trial as a separate issue of an affirmative defense alleged in the answer. In Smith v. Western Pacific Railway Company (144 App. Div. 180; affd., 203 N. Y. 499) this court in directing, a separate trial of an issue raised by the answer, says: “ The direction of the statute is that the order shall rest in the discretion of the court, which should be judicially and perhaps sparingly exercised. If the court’s discretion be so exercised the section should prove to be of distinct benefit by saving the time of the
The case at bar does not come within the limitations of the rule as thus stated by Mr. Justice Scott. It is difficult to see why the evidence relevant to the issue thus sought to be separately tried would not be in part at least relevant to the other issues raised in the complaint and answer. Any information which the plaintiff possessed at the time of the claimed ratification of the agreement would be properly proven upon this issue and if such information were possessed at the time of the original contract, it would also be pertinent to the main issue to be tried as to the fraud of the defendant and a reliance of the plaintiff thereupon. The issue raised by the separate answer, which has been directed to be separately tried, is so interlocked with the issues which must. be investigated at the trial of the action itself, that much of the evidence would be necessary in both trials in case the defendant failed in its affirmative defense thus asserted. It is claimed that in a former trial, involving substantially the same issue, the time of the court was occupied for three weeks, and that a separate trial of this issue would much expedite the case if only the defendant could succeed upon such trial. In the light, however, of the former trial and of the examination of the defendant before trial by the plaintiff, which has already been had, it is probable that the trial upon the main issue can be much expedited. Moreover, it is not at all certain that such trial of this separate issue would not prove wholly abortive. The defendant upon the separate trial would be required to show that the facts concerning
The order should, therefore, be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with' ten dollars costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Page and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.