103 N.Y. 604 | NY | 1886
The complaint contains seven causes of action. As to the first six no question arises. The seventh makes out a perfect case upon a promissory note against the defendant as indorser, and the answer denies none of the plaintiffs' allegations, but sets up affirmatively that the defendant was an accommodation indorser and that the note was in fact paid out of moneys in the hands of the plaintiffs' testator, applicable thereto. The defendant adds, upon information and belief, "that the said plaintiffs are not the lawful owners and holders of said note, and that he is not indebted to them thereupon in any sum whatever." This clause is relied upon by the respondents as an answer to the appeal. It is not sufficient. It is not a denial of any averment. Neither of the facts so controverted are alleged in the complaint. It is merely an affirmative statement of a conclusion drawn from the preceding new matter in the answer, and while it might have been omitted as wholly unnecessary, it put in issue no part of the plaintiffs' case. The whole burden of proof lay upon the defendant, and without evidence the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict. (Fleischmann v. Stern,
The learned counsel for the respondent has placed upon his points cases from the reports of other States. We do not refer to them, for our own Code upon this subject is very explicit and requires each material allegation in the complaint, not controverted by the answer, to be taken as true. (§ 522.) In this case, as before suggested, no allegation is denied. It was, therefore, for the defendant to establish the defense set up, and as he thus held the affirmative, he had the right to open and close the evidence, and the learned trial judge erred in ruling to the contrary.
The judgment appealed from should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur, except RUGER, Ch. J., and FINCH, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed. *607