213 A.D. 313 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1925
The defendant answered the amended complaint, setting forth two counterclaims. I think the court erred in refusing to set aside the complaint for insufficiency. It is evident from a reading
A copy of the agreement is not contained in nor annexed to the complaint, nor do its terms anywhere appear. It nowhere 'appears in the complaint where the defendant is to act in the purchasing and selling of automobiles and parts or for how long a period. In the 4th paragraph of the complaint the plaintiff alleges that the plaintiff was incorporated by three individuals, namely, Harold W. Dolman, Leonard F. Liebermann and Seymour Glantz, who are alleged to be “ the same parties mentioned in the contract and with whom the defendant made said contract,” and that in and by virtue of said contract the corporation to be formed by said individuals was to be known as the New York Du Pont Motor Sales Company; that upon application to incorporate under that name a certificate of incorporation was refused because of the similarity of other Du Pont corporations, and that by reason of such refusal the said individuals incorporated in the name of Du Pont Automobile Distributors, Inc., and continued to do business with the defendant under the aforementioned contract. The complaint further alleges that subsequent to the making of the contract “ hereinbefore alleged ” it was mutually agreed between the parties thereto that said agreement should be and was modified in respect to the change in prices of the automobiles to be manufactured and furnished by the defendant to the plaintiff, the modification as to prices being set forth in the complaint. In the 8th paragraph of the complaint the plaintiff alleges that the defendant, under and pursuant to the said contract and the modification thereof, obligated itself, among other conditions, “ for the period mentioned in the said contract,” to manufacture .and deliver to the plaintiff a certain amount of automobiles “ as therein mentioned in certain territory as set forth in said contract ” in which territory the plaintiff was granted the right as distributors to sell the automobiles manufactured by the defendant “ for the term therein mentioned in the said contract,” and that without cause or justification the defendant, on or about the 2d day of August, 1922, refused to perform the conditions of the contract and the modification thereof on its part obligated to be performed, to plaintiff’s damage, which
Not only is the complaint deficient in failing to set forth either the terms of the contract or a copy thereof, but it also fails to allege any breach of such contract. The court at Special Term in denying defendant’s motion evidently relied upon the fact that an answer had been interposed by the defendant and that two counterclaims were therein set up based upon the contract in suit. I think the court was incorrect not only as to the law applicable to the case but as to the fact of counterclaims being set up by the defendant in its answer applicable to the same contract attempted to be alleged in the complaint. The answer denies the making of any contract as set forth in the complaint. Nowhere in the complaint are any facts set forth showing any obligation on the part of the defendant or any breach of any obligation of the defendant. As before stated, the allegation of the complaint is that the plaintiff entered into a written agreement with the defendant, the terms of which are not set forth. The written agreement is not attached to nor is it incorporated in the complaint by reference in any way. It has been repeatedly held by this and other courts that the mere reference to a contract in a pleading does not make that contract "a part of the pleading unless a copy of it is annexed. (Boiardi v. Marden, Orth & Hastings Corp., 194 App. Div. 307; Bandler v. Globe & Rutgers Fire Ins. Co., 205 id. 515.) Also, as to the modification attempted to be alleged in the complaint, the plaintiff fails to set forth the terms of the agreement. The allegation that the defendant “ under and pursuant to the contract * * * obligated itself ” is nothing more than a conclusion of the pleader. There is no allegation in the complaint that the defendant promised or agreed to do anything. (Booth v. New Process Cork Co., 196 App. Div. 376.) The term when the contract was to be operative is not stated, the allegation being that the defendant, under and pursuant to the contract, the terms of which are not set forth, obligated itself, among other conditions, “ for the period mentioned in the said contract,’’ to manufacture and deliver to the plaintiff a certain kind of automobile, etc., “in certain territory as set forth in said contract.” There is no allegation whatever as to what the period of operation was nor what the territory embraced. Thus at most the contract was one at will, and the allegation of the complaint that “ without cause or justification the defendant on or about the 2d day of August, 1922, refused to perform the conditions of the contract and the modification thereof on its [defendant’s] part obligated to be performed,” is a mere'statement of a conclusion, and it nowhere
I think the court was in error in holding that the allegations of the answer by way of counterclaim cured the failure of the complaint to set forth facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Upon such a motion testing the sufficiency of the complaint the complaint must stand upon its own merits and the answer cannot be resorted to to cure a defective complaint. (Lyonette Silks, Inc., v. Dolson Co., 187 App. Div. 473.) This court held in Brodsky v. Rieser (195 App. Div. 557, 558): “ On such a motion [for judgment on the pleadings] the denials in the answer must be ignored and the complaint tested as on a demurrer.”
The learned justice presiding at Special Term seemed of the opinion that the defendant should either demand a bill of particulars or move to examine the plaintiff before trial. We know of no obligation on defendant’s part to adopt such a course. Certainly the defendant would have no right to examine the plaintiff in relation to the affirmative allegations of plaintiff’s complaint, and a bill of particulars is not for the purpose of enlarging a complaint but for the purpose of hmiting it. (Andersen Trading Co., Ltd., v. Brody,
There is no allegation in the complaint of performance by the plaintiff. It is true the plaintiff in the 3d paragraph of the complaint alleges that the defendant contracted with it, but in the following paragraph it is alleged that the plaintiff was incorporated by the three individuals, "being the same parties mentioned in the contract and with whom the defendant made said contract.” It is then alleged that these parties incorporated the plaintiff and that the defendant continued to do business with the plaintiff under plaintiff’s name as incorporated. It, therefore, appears that the contract in suit was not even made with the plaintiff. The plaintiff was not then in existence, but was incorporated later by the individuals with whom the plaintiff alleges that the defendant contracted. There was no allegation in the complaint that the individuals ever assigned their rights under the contract to the plaintiff or that the plaintiff assumed the same, the only allegation being that the three individuals under their “ corporate name continued to do business with the defendant.” There is no allegation of due performance by the individuals, and the only allegation is that the plaintiff duly pérformed. We think the allegations of the complaint are entirely insufficient.
The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars
Clarke, P. J., Finch, Martin and Burr, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs, with leave to plaintiff to serve an amended complaint within twenty days from service of order upon payment of all costs in the action to date.