40 N.Y.S. 914 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff (Heffern) brings this action to recover damages against the defendant, Garret Hunt, for an injury alleged to have occurred to the plaintiff on the 11th day of March, 1894, through the wrongful act and neglect of the said defendant in leaving a hole not properly guarded in the sidewalk on a public street in the city of Lockport, opposite the defendant’s premises on Lock street in said city. The defendant Hunt answered, putting in issue the claim of the plaintiff, and subsequently the plaintiff’s attorney discovered that at the time of the plaintiff’s injury the premises were leased to Little, and that he was in possession of the premises, and the plaintiff moved at Special Term to have Little brought in and made a party defendant, and that a supplemental summons and complaint be issued for that purpose, which were attached to the motion papers. The supplemental complaint charged that, prior to the time when Little went into possession of the premises as a tenant, the sidewalk in front of the store, being constructed of stone flagging, became fractured for about two feet square, causing the same to sink and depress into the cellar or excavation beneath, and to be unsafe, which the defendant Hunt negligently permitted, and that thereafter, when Little went into possession of the premises, he carelessly and negligently placed a piece of board of about flve feet
The Special Term directed, by its order, that Little be brought into the case as a defendant, and that a supplemental summons be served upon him, and a supplemental complaint upon the defendant Hunt, from which order the defendant Hunt appealed.
The respondent seeks to sustain this order under section 452 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is as follows: “ The court may determine the controversy, as between the parties before it, where it can do so without prejudice to the rights of others, or by saving their rights; but where a complete determination of the controversy cannot be had without the presence of other parties the court must direct them to be brought in. And where a person not a party to the action has an interest in the subject thereof or in real property, the title to which may in any manner be affected by the' judgment, and makes application to the court to be made a party, it must direct him to be brought in by the proper amendment.”
The following section (453) directs that when a new defendant is brought in and the order is not made upon his own application, a supplemental summons must be issued, etc., for that purpose.
Section 452 provides for a relief similar to that authorized by section 122 of the Code of Procedure. Under that Code and under our present one, the courts have held that the provision permitting or requiring the court to have parties brought in, in order that a complete determination of the controversy might be had, applied only to equitable actions. The other provision of section 452 of the new Code permitting a person not a party who has an interest in the subject-matter of the action to come in upon his own application applies to all kinds of actions, whether legal or equitable. (McMahon v. Allen, 12 How. Pr. 39; affd. in 3 Abb. Pr. 89 ; Webster v. Bond, 9 Hun, 437; Chapman v. Forbes, 123 N. Y. 532; Rosenberg v. Salomon et al., 144 id. 92; Baylies’ Trial Practice, 268, 269,
This is purely a legal action, an action to recover damages for a tort, whether that tort springs out of negligence or a nuisance. In such actions the plaintiff in the first instance, in case of more than one person engaged in a common tort, can sue one or all of the parties offending, in one action. The plaintiff in this case chose to sue Hunt alone, and he now seeks the.aid of the court to bring in Little, who, he now alleges, was also liable for the same tort that Hunt committed. We are not referred to any case, nor has considerable research enabled us to discover any case, where the court has permitted a plaintiff, by means of supplemental process, or by amendment of the original process and complaint, to bring in a party defendant in an action of tort where he has omitted to include him in the action as first instituted. At common law new defendants could not be added by way of amendment unless by express consent of the parties. (Encyclopaedia of Pleading & Practice, 542, n. 1; Commission Co. v. Russ, 8 Cow. 122.)
In Hornby v. Cordon (9 Bosw. 655) Judge Howell reaches the conclusion that under section 122 of the old Code, in an action by a vendor of goods to recover possession of them on the ground of fraud on the part of the purchaser, third persons claiming under the purchaser by virtue of a contract with him, and in hostility to each other, could not be granted leave to come in as parties, and that under the practice as it prevailed before the Code the courts possessed no power in actions at law either to bring in parties necessary to a complete determination of the controversy, or to allow substitution of defendants, except in the single action of ejectment. That power in ecpúty actions resided in the Court of Chancery.
In Chapman v. Forbes, decided under our present Code in December, 1890 (123 N. Y. supra), it was held that the plaintiff in an action at law which seeks nothing but a money judgment cannot be compelled to bring in other parties than those he has chosen to make defendants. The motion to compel the plaintiff to bring in, in this case, was made by the defendant, and the ground of this decision was that in such a case the sections 441 and 452 of the Code did not apply.
In Rosenberg v. Salomon (supra) it was held that where a third
We have reached the conclusion that the order appealed from cannot be sustained under section 452 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but the respondent claims that the court had power to grant this order under section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which authorizes the court, in furtherance of justice, to add the name of a party or strike out the name of a party, or correct a mistake in such name. The language of this section seems to confer a broad grant of power upon the court’s discretion in relation to parties, but this-section should be construed in connection with section. 452 and section 447, and the power should not be exercised unless the defendant sought to be brought in is a necessary party or interested in the event of the action in connection with the original parties to the action. The lessee of the premises where the accident to the plaintiff occurred, whom the order appealed from brings in as a party defendant, is nowise interested in the event of the action between the plaintiff and the defendant Hunt. Little is liable, if at all, for his own wrongful act, as also is Hunt for his own wrongful act.
Perfect relief in damages can be obtained from either of these defendants in separate actions, because each is liable, if at all, for the whole damage incurred. The plaintiff does not seek in his. motion to bring in Little by way of an amendment to his original pleadings, but by supplemental pleadings, upon the idea that sections.
If the accident to the plaintiff were due to the sole negligence of Hunt, or to his negligence in conjunction with Little, he can proceed to judgment against Hunt just as well with Little out of the case as in it, and, therefore, in a legal sense Little has no such interest in the controversy between the plaintiff and Hunt as justifies his intrusion into the case either on the motion of the plaintiff or of the defendant Hunt, or of Little himself; but it is claimed by the learned counsel for the respondent that the order does not in any manner prejudice the appellant Hunt, and he should, therefore, not be heard to complain of it here.
The order requires that the supplemental complaint served upon the defendant Hunt, with the moving papers, “ be and the same shall be the complaint in the action, and the defendant, Garret Hunt, to have twenty days after the service of this order * * * in which to answer such supplemental complaint,” so that a new complaint is thrust ujdoii Hunt with a new defendant, and he is comjDelled to answer that new complaint or he will be in default. He has, then, such an interest in this order as will permit him to be heard here to overthrow it. (Akin v. The Albany & N. R. R. Co., 14 How. Pr. 337.)
This appeal involves an interesting question of practice and procedure, and we have given it careful consideration, and have reached the conclusion that the order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the action
All concur, except Follett, J., dissenting.
Dissenting Opinion
It is conceded that the plaintiff might have joined John F. Little as a defendant with Garret Hunt, who was sued alone. It seems to me that in such a case the court has power, under section 123 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to authorize an additional defendant to he brought into an action at law. What the plaintiff might have properly done in the first instance in the way of making persons defendant may be permitted by the court to be done. The joinder of the additional defendant may prevent the necessity of bringing another action. I am unable to see any objection' to the order, and think it should be affirmed, with costs.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied.