Fulton Bank v. Beach

2 Paige Ch. 307 | New York Court of Chancery | 1830

The Chancellor.

There can be no possible doubt that • the filing of this second answer, without the leave of the court was irregular, and the same was a nullity. The court, for the purpose of preventing irregularities and to preserve its files from being encumbered with ' improper papers, prohibited answers from being filed without oath, except under an order of the court. But an answer thus filed was good as against the party who put in the same, and it did not lie in his mouth to complain of his own irregularity, or of that of his solicitor. If the complainants had known pf the answer not being sworn to', they "might notwithstanding have treated it as a valid answer ; and if they chose to treat it as such, it would have the same effect in favor of the defendants as if it had been sworn to by all. , Whether -in this particular case their solicitor did know of the fact is therefore immaterial, though I presume all parties supposed for nearly two years afterwards that it had been actually sworn to by all the defendants whose answer it professed to be. As it was a joint and several answer, if it was irregular as' to one of the defendants, it was, irregular as to all. There is no pretence that it was not precisely such an answer as Beach would have consented to if it had been presented to him, at that time, instead of being put in by his co-defendant, who was also his solicitor ;• though subsequent events have made it of importance to all the defendants now' to alter their defence. . At the time this last answer was put in, the' other defendants had the same right to take advantage of their former irregularity as Beach himself. The testimony had been taken for all the defendants, and the cause was in readiness for hearing as to all. '

This irregularity has not been , cured by any act of the complainants. Even if the subsequent appeal was not an *309absolute abandonment of' his answer, the complainants have done no act founded on the answer by which it was treated as a regular proceeding. It was, in that stage of the proceedings» absolutely void, and could, not be made good without some positive act of the complainants affirming its validity. If they had filed a replication thereto, neither party could have taken any proofs thereon without a special order of the court» as the proofs were regularly closed ; and the court of errors, on 'the appeal which was then pending, have decided that they cannot be opened. It was therefore not material whether they moved to take it off the files immediately after it was placed there,'or at a later period. If this motion had not been • made, the paper thus filed could not, on the hearing, have been treated as any part of the pleadings in the cause,; and after the decisions of the court of dernier resort on other questions in. this cause, founded on the presumption that the cause was in readiness for hearing on the pleadings and proofs as they formerly stood, this court could not have treated this as a valid answer.

, As this paper, is improperly on the files, and ought not to remain there to produce confusion in the records, the motion that it be taken off the files must be granted. But as the same thing would have been done at the hearing, on a ■ mere suggestion, when all the facts were before the court, I shall not charge the adverse party with the costs of this application. (a)

Affirmed December, 1830, 6 Wend. Rep. 36.

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