8 How. Pr. 28 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1852
There are three forms in which a defendant may put in issue the allegations of the complaint. The first is, when the fact alleged is a matter-within the personal knowledge of the defendant. The second is, when the matter alleged is not within the personal knowledge of the defendant, but relying upon his information, he either believes or does not believe the allegation to be true. The third is, when he has no such knowledge or information as will enable him to form a belief, whether the allegation is true or not. These forms of pleading may not be indiscriminately adopted. If the matter alleged is such as must, from its very nature, be within the defendant’s own personal knowledge, he can not deny it upon information merely. If it be a matter in respect to which he has no personal knowledge, he must deny it upon his information, if he have such information as enables him to say he believes it to be untrue. When he is unable, either from his own knowledge or upon any information he has received, to say whether the allegation is true or' not, he may say so, and this will be sufficient to put the allegation in issue. The answer will be insufficient, if it denies merely upon information an allegation, the truth or falsity of which is within the defendant’s own knowledge. So also, it will he insufficient, if it allege merely that the defendant has not sufficient knowledge on the subject to form a belief, without referring to his information. It is only when he has neither knowledge nor information to enable him to form a belief on
Tested by these rules, those portions of the answer which the plaintiff moves to strike out, are obviously defective. Whether the plaintiff gave the defendants notice that the rate of insurance would be increased, and whether, upon receiving such notice, they gave the plaintiff the authority stated' in the complaint, are matters which must be within the personal knowledge of the defendants. They were bound therefore, unless they would admit the allegations, to deny them positively. It -was, to say the least, an evasion for the defendants to controvert these allegations by saying they had not sufficient, knowledge to form a belief in respect to them.
■But all three of the paragraphs to which the motion applies are defective for another reason., In each instance, the defendants state that they have- not sufficient knowledge to form a belief, and therefore they controvert the allegation. The defendants only speak of their want of knowledge. Before they can be allowed thus to controvert an allegation, they must declare not only their want of knowledge, but their want of information also. It may well be that the defendants could not say they had no sufficient knowledge or information to enable them to form a belief whether the allegations they were answering were true or not. We have seen that it is only when there is an absence of such knowledge or information that this mode of answering is allowable.
The motion must be granted, with costs, but with liberty to the defendants to amend their answer within twenty days after service of a copy of the order upon this decision.