29 N.Y.S. 342 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
The complaint alleges in sum and substance that the defendant owned a tract of sixty-five acres of land, and in order to secure the experience and assistance of the plaintiff in laying it out in lots and streets, and selling it off by lots at'
The answer denies the copartnership, and alleges that the plaintiff was only the employee of the defendant.
The proof shows that there was no copartnership, but that the plaintiff was employed as an agent by the defendant to prepare the land for sale and sell it, as aforesaid, and that for his services he was to be paid one-quarter of the overplus, as already stated; and that, after the contract had been partly performed, a large number of sales having been made, the defendant discharged the plaintiff. The cause of action which the proof presents is, therefore, one for damages for breach of contract for services. The amount already realized from sales is easily ascertained. Past sales furnish evidence of the time and effort it would take to sell off all of the lots, and also of the price for which the lots can be sold, and it would n°t be difficult to otherwise prove their value ; so that no difficulty would be encountered in proving the damage which the plaintiff has sustained by the breach of the contract. In this state of the case, may the court go on and assess the damage in this action, or must the complaint be dismissed ? The complaint states a case which is within the jurisdiction of equity, and is
This brings me down to saying what must be done with this action. Under our existing system, both actions at law and suits in equity being brought in the same court, they are in regular course placed upon separate calendars by the parties themselves, namely, actions at law upon the calendar of causes to be tried by a jury, and equity actions upon the calendar of causes to be tried by the court without a jury. When Chancery existed as a separate court, if a suitor came there with a common-law action he was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. But now, if a plaintiff place an action at law upon the equity calendar, and notice it for trial there, he may not be dismissed out of court. The court may, of its own motion, refuse to hear it and send it to the jury calendar, or, if the court be willing to hear it, the defendant may, nevertheless, by demanding a jury trial, have the cause sent to the jury calendar, and, if he do not so demand, he waives the right to a jury trial and confers jurisdiction upon the court to hear it without a jury, and the rule is .the same whichever side has so placed it upon the calendar and noticed it. Code Civ. Proc. § 1009. The cause of action stated in the complaint in this action being wholly equitable, and in no aspect constituting an action at law, the case was properly placed upon the equity calendar and noticed for trial there by the parties. For the same reason the defendant had no right to demand a jury trial. The case presented by the complaint was not one which entitled the defendant to a jury trial, and he was bound by the complaint in that respect. It cannot, therefore, be claimed
The complaint is, therefore, dismissed, with costs.