76 A.D. 365 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
This action was called for trial on the 17th of February, 190$. At that time-affidavits were submitted on behalf of the defendants explaining their inability to proceed with the trial. These affidavits alleged that defendants’ attorney had been subpoenaed and was then in 'attendance at -a trial being held before the Supreme Court, where be was a material- and necessary witness. The case was held until two o’clock, when further affidavits were submitted in behalf of the defendants, but the case was ordered to trial, and defendants’ attorney appeared late in the day but did not have his witnesses ready. Under these circumstances the defendants defaulted, and the plaintiff took a default and judgment upon the pleadings alone without any proofs. Subsequently defendants moved the court, upon affidavits at Special Term, to open the default and vacate the judgment under the provisions of section 724 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which motion was granted without terms by the learned justice who had presided at the trial where the default was taken. Upon plaintiff’s application the order was resettled by eliminating á recital of the affidavits upon which the motion to vacate the judgment was made, and basing the vacation of the judgment solely upon the ground that no proofs were given upon the trial, and that defendants’ answer raised issues requiring proofs before entitling plaintiff to judgment. Upon an appeal being taken by the plaintiff from such resettled order, the same was reversed, the court holding that as the affidavits showing what occurred at the Trial Term were not printed in the record, and, as the judgment contained a recital of the making of findings of fact, the judgment upon the record as then presented must be presumed to have been regularly taken. It was, however, provided that the defendants might renew the motion to vacate the judgment upon the affidavits which now appear in the record. This last application was made at Special Term and resulted in the order, portions of which are appealed from, and which imposes conditions upon the defendants which seem to us not warranted by the facts.
Assuming that the plaintiff sets forth a good cause of action in his complaint, the defendants have answered Under oath, and deny several material allegations of the complaint, so that the plaintiff was not in a position to take judgment without proof of the mat
It is well settled that an answer made upon information and belief cannot be stricken out as sham, even where the person was in a position to know the facts (Humble v. McDonough, 5 Misc. Rep. 508, and authorities cited; Gallagher v. Merrill, 13 App. Div. 182,
All concurred.
Order so far as appealed from reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.