29 N.Y.S. 65 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1894
The plaintiff sued upon a policy of insurance
upon the life of her brother, and in which she was designated as the1 beneficiary. As a counterclaim, defendant interposed a judgment"
“If the plaintiff is a trustee for another, or if the action is in the name of .-a plaintiff who has no actual interest in the contract upon which it is founded, :a demand against the plaintiff shall not be allowed as a counterclaim; but so much of a demand existing against the person whom he represents or for •whose benefit the action is brought, as will satisfy the plaintiff’s demand, must be allowed as a counterclaim, if it might have been so allowed in an .action brought by the person beneficially interested.”
It is open to serious question whether the provisions of section .'502 of the Code of Civil Procedure are available to a plaintiff in an ■.action brought in the district court in the city of New York, a plain summary of the law being that the section is applicable to actions in every court within the state except the district courts alluded to.. Section 502 is a part of article 3 of chapter 6 of the Code, and by subdivision 4 of section'3347 the whole chapter 6 is made exclusively applicable to actions in the supreme court, the superior city courts, the city court of New York, and the county courts. By section 2945, sections 501 and 502 are extended to actions in the justices’ courts, but neither the Code nor the consolidation act renders section 502 applicable to the district courts in the city of New York. The sections of the Code which regulate the procedure in the last-mentioned courts are 3207 to 3222, both inclusive; but nothing therein contained either expressly or by necessary implication extends the operation of section 502 to actions in those courts. Section 2938, with reference to the justices’ courts only, provides that the answer may set forth new matter constituting a defense or counterclaim; and
That, in consideration of the policy, and the payment of the premiums by the insured, the plaintiff may have rendered herself liable to the personal representatives of the insured, or to the undertaker upon her promise to pay the funeral expenses of the insured, does not render either the representatives or the undertaker beneficially interested in the policy issued by the defendant If that were otherwise, this action would not be maintainable, since, by express provision of law (Code Civ. Proe. § 449), the action must be brought in the name of the real party in interest. The institution and prosecution of the action by the plaintiff as the beneficiary named in the policy is therefore in and of itself a refutation that another is the real party in interest. To hold that the counterclaim is not available to the defendant because another than the plaintiff is the real party in interest respecting the demand sought to be enforced is to say that the plaintiff is not entitled to a recovery. The plaintiff’s contention respecting her claim and the defendant’s counterclaim are therefore plainly inconsistent. She is either the party in interest, and then the counterclaim is available, or she is not the party in interest, and then she cannot maintain the action. By bringing and prosecuting the action, and asserting her right to recover, she insists that she is the party in interest respecting the demand in suit; and so, by her own admission, the defendant’s counterclaim is available against her. A judgment in her favor determines that it was.
It is apparent that the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 502 of the Code of Civil Procedure must be read with the provisions of section 449, and that the persons against whom a personal indebtedness shall not be available to the defendant as a counterclaim are such as may be properly classed as “trustees of express trusts.” Hood v Hayward, 124 N. Y. 1, 24, 26 N. E. 331; Sperb v. McConn, 110 N. Y. 605, 610, 18 N. E. 441; Wetmore v. Porter, 92 N. Y. 76, 83; Trust Co. v. Stanton, 139 N. Y. 531, 534, 34 N. E. 1098; Duncan v. Insurance Co., 129 N. Y. 237, 246, 29 N. E. 76. No express trust in favor of the legal-representatives of the insured or the undertaker was created by the plaintiff’s oral agreement to pay the funeral expenses. Pom. Bern. & Bern. Bights, §§ 171-182; Considerant v. Brisbane, 22 N. Y.