59 Misc. 2d 666 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1969
Plaintiffs in July, 1964 entered into a contract with Trend Set Construction Corporation for remodeling work on plaintiffs’ home. The contract was signed on behalf of the corporation by defendant Schnitter, as salesman, and a retail installment obligation incorporating the terms of the contract was signed by plaintiffs and on behalf of the corporation by defendant Samet, as president. Claiming breach of that contract, plaintiffs sued Trend Set and on December 10, 1964 obtained judgment by default in the amount of $10,647.33. A motion to open the default of the corporation was made on the basis of an affidavit of defendant Samet traversing service on the corporation. When that motion came on to be heard it was stipulated that the judgment be vacated upon the corporation’s filing a surety bond of $7,500. The bond was never filed and on May 14,1965 an order denying the motion to open the default was entered.
Defendant Sehnitter has defaulted. Defendant Samet’s answer admits execution of the retail installment obligation as alleged in paragraph 8 of the complaint but denies that she executed it as president of the corporation as alleged in paragraph 9, denies the implied warranty of authority, and denies the breach of contract. It also pleads affirmative defenses of release, waiver, laches, dismissal of a prior suit against another legal entity, ratification, unjust enrichment, de facto corporation and estoppel. Plaintiffs now move for summary judgment and, contending that the judgment in the 1964 action is res judicata on the issues of breach and damages, ask immediate entry of judgment. The motion is granted to the extent of striking defendant Samet’s answer, except as to damages, and the matter is set down on the Trial Term, Part I calendar for the opening day of the September 1969 Term for assessment of damages, assessment being delayed until that time to allow for the service of plaintiffs’ bill of particulars as ordered on companion motion decided herewith and for examination of plaintiffs as to damages, if defendant Samet be so advised.
“ The affidavit submitted in opposition to the motion * * * is conclusory and does little more than restate [the] pleadings. Triable issues of fact are not established merely by repeating the allegations of the pleadings ” (Siren Realty Corp. v. Biltmore Prods. Corp., 27 A D 2d 519, 520.) Defendant “must state his version, and he must do so in evidentiary form” (Kramer v. Harris, 9 A D 2d 282, 283). The bald denial of paragraph 9, when the retail installment obligation referred to in paragraph 8 and annexed to the complaint as Exhibit B is signed “ Trend Set Const. Corp. by Marilyn Samet, Pres.” is meaningless. Moreover, measured by the standard of the Siren Realty and Kramer eases, none of the other denials or affirmative defenses except de facto corporation are supported “in evidentiary form ” by defendant’s affidavits.
Having contracted in the name of a nonexistent corporation, defendant Samet is personally liable (Fuller v. Rowe, 57 N. Y. 23; Puro Filter Corp. v. Trembley, 266 App. Div. 750; Worthington v. Griesser, 77 App. Div. 203) and since the corporation did not have de facto existence and defendant makes no claim that plaintiffs knew the corporation to be nonexistent until after entry of the 1964 judgment, the doctrine of estoppel cannot be invoked against plaintiffs, Puro Filter Corp. v. Trembley (supra). Defendant Samet may also be held upon the implied-in-law warranty of her authority to act on behalf of the nonexistent corporation (Moore v. Maddock, 251 N. Y. 420).
Plaintiffs are, therefore, entitled to summary judgment, but defendant is not foreclosed by the 1964 judgment from litigating the issue of damages. The predicate of either res judicata or collateral estoppel is a valid prior judgment. The 1964 judgment upon which plaintiffs rely to establish the amount of their damages was obtained by default against a nonexistent
Defendant asks .summary judgment in her favor on the second cause of action on the ground that attorney’s fees can be recovered only when a contract or statute so provides. However, a plaintiff who seeks in good faith to enforce a contract against a third person for whom defendant undertook to contract is entitled in an action against defendant to recover the expenses of the abortive first action, including reasonable attorney’s fees (White v. Madison, 26 N. Y. 117, 129; Howells v. Albert, 37 Misc 2d 856).
Plaintiffs are, therefore, entitled to have both causes of action set down for assessment. Under the circumstances the action against defendant Schnitter will not be severed. Rather the inquest against him and the assessment against defendant Samet will be tried together.