135 Misc. 553 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1929
Motion to dismiss complaint as against the defendant Sternlicht on the ground of the improper joinder of causes of action and of parties defendant. The complaint alleges two causes of action, the first against the defendant Lipschutz to recover for work, labor and services performed by the plaintiff’s assignor at the request of the said defendant in the manufacture of certain coats, and the second against the defendant Sternlicht for an alleged breach of warranty in the sale by him to the plaintiff’s assignor of certain fur collars to be used in the manufacture of the coats mentioned-, and which the plaintiff claims were improperly dyed, causing the cloth in the coats to become streaky and discolored, and which resulted in a rejection of the coats by the defendant Lipschutz after the plaintiff had manufactured them and bad delivered them to the latter. The plaintiff further alleges that ho is in doubt as to the defendant from whom he is entitled to redress and has joined both of them in the action for the purpose of having this liability determined. The plaintiff apparently has joined the defendants in the action pursuant to the provisions of section 213 of the Civil Practice Act. That section, however, is not applica-I le, as it may only be invoked where the plaintiff is in doubt as to which defendant óf those joined in the action is liable for the redress of a single wrong. As stated in Klein v. Betzold (119 Misc. 505) the doubt must be a “ fair doubt as to whom the plaintiff should look to right a single wrong and not a doubt as to whether one or several persons have separately wronged plaintiff.” (See, also, Stern v. Ide & Co., Inc., 212 App. Div. 714.) Furthermore, the causes of action are inconsistent and cannot be joined in the same complaint. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 258.) The cause of action against Lipschutz is founded on the theory that the work, labor and .services performed in the manufacture of the coats was done in