OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue before us is the import of equitable defenses and/or counterclaims on defendants’ right to a jury trial on plaintiffs’ legal claims.
Plaintiffs are limited partnerships that own two Section 8 housing projects. They commenced this action to recover damages arising out of the alleged mismanagement of those buildings by defendants based on claims, inter alia, of breach of contract and conversion and seek to have the defendants-respondents removed as general partners and managing agents of the projects. In addition to raising both legal and equitable defenses to plaintiffs’ causes of action, defendants asserted counterclaims for the recovery of the "reasonable commercial value” of services allegedly performed for plaintiffs as well as reimbursement for expenditures allegedly made for plaintiffs’ benefit while defendants were engaged in managing the subject properties. Upon defendants’ demand for a trial by jury, plaintiffs moved to strike the demand on the ground that defendants have no right to a jury trial on their equitable defenses and that, by asserting them, they have waived their right to a jury on plaintiffs’ legal claims. Plaintiffs also argue that, even if defendants’ assertion of equitable defenses did not act as a waiver, their assertion of equitable counterclaims along with their equitable defenses constituted such a waiver. The motion court denied plaintiffs’ motion to strike the jury demand and sua sponte decided that the jury would serve in an advisory capacity with respect to any equitable claims and defenses.
Since the merger of law and equity, few situations remain in which the courts are required to make distinctions between what would once have been an action at law and what would have been a suit in equity. One of these situations is the determination of whether a litigant is entitled to a trial by jury,
The right to a trial by jury is governed by article I (§ 2) of the New York State Constitution, which decrees that a "[t]rial by jury in all cases in which it has heretofore been guaranteed by constitutional provision shall remain inviolate forever”. This provision, enacted in 1938, is generally interpreted to mean that the guarantee extends to all matters to which the prior Constitution, enacted in 1894, extended the guarantee. This includes all matters to which a constitutional right attached at the time of adoption of the first Constitution in 1777, i.e., matters traditionally triable before a jury in a court of law or to which the right had been extended by statute prior to 1777, as well as any matters as to which a right to trial by jury was created by statute between 1777 and adoption of the 1894 Constitution (Murphy v American Home Prods. Corp.,
The threshold issue in this case, i.e., a defendant’s right to a jury trial on equitable defenses, was, in fact, the subject of a statute prior to the adoption of the 1894 Constitution. Section 968 of the Code of Civil Procedure, enacted in 1876, and the forerunner of CPLR 4101, provided that all questions of fact arising in actions for a sum of money only, for ejectment, for dower, for waste, for a nuisance or to recover a chattel were required to be tried by a jury, unless waived or referred. In 1925, Justice Cardozo, writing for the Court of Appeals and interpreting identical language which had been incorporated into the subsequently enacted Civil Practice Act, stated that this statutory mandate also covered questions of fact arising from equitable defenses addressed to the specified causes of action (see, Susquehanna S. S. Co. v Andersen & Co.,
The practice of submitting equitable defenses to a jury, whether by statutory mandate or as a matter of discretion, was eliminated by the enactment of that part of CPLR 4101 providing that "equitable defenses and equitable counterclaims shall be tried by the court” (see, Mercantile & Gen. Reins. Co. v Colonial Assur. Co.,
Parenthetically, it may be noted that despite the salutary purpose intended by CPLR 4101, the arguably unconstitutional deprivation of a jury trial for certain equitable defenses which were statutorily required to be tried by jury prior to the adoption of the 1894 Constitution has not gone completely unnoticed (see, Siegel, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR 4101, at 191 ["the language of CPLR 4101 about equitable 'defenses’ being triable by the court may be too sweeping, and run afoul of the constitutional right to trial by jury”]).
In the case before us, since the main thrust of plaintiffs’ action, and the relief sought, do not fall within the categories specified in predecessor section 968 of the Code of Civil Procedure, there could be no constitutional impediment to finding that defendants’ equitable defenses must be tried by the court in accordance with the dictates of CPLR 4101.
However, the critical question, and the crux of plaintiffs’ argument, is not merely that defendants are not entitled to a jury trial as to these defenses, but whether, by raising them defendants have also waived their right to a jury trial on plaintiffs’ legal claims.
Clearly, a waiver of a jury trial may under certain circumstances be imputed to a plaintiff who actually joins an equit
We find, however, that such a waiver should not be imputed merely on the basis of raising equitable defenses. There is a significant distinction between defenses and counterclaims. The bringing of an equitable counterclaim is, at least theoretically, a voluntary act, from which a waiver may arguably be inferred. An equitable defense, on the contrary, as with any defense, must be raised now or forever be waived, and its assertion, which is necessarily dictated by the nature of plaintiffs’ causes of action, cannot therefore be fairly characterized as voluntary in this context. For this reason, the mere assertion by defendants of equitable defenses could not fairly, without the concomitant assertion of equitable counterclaims, result in a waiver of the right to a jury.
Plaintiffs further contend, however, that, even if we were to find that the assertion of equitable defenses is not alone sufficient to constitute a waiver of defendants’ right to a jury trial on plaintiffs’ legal claims, in this case, their counterclaims also are equitable in nature, which would require a finding of waiver under Seneca v Novaro (supra).
In this case, it is not entirely clear from defendants’ answer whether the damages sought under their counterclaims are claimed pursuant to provisions of the contracts between the parties, which defendants do not specifically refer to in setting forth their counterclaims, or whether defendants are seeking these amounts under the quasi-contractual theory of quantum meruit. However, under either theory, these counterclaims would be categorized as "legal”, rather than "equitable”, and their assertion would not deprive defendants of their right to a jury trial. A cause of action seeking money damages for breach of contract is quintessentially an action at law (Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Assn. v State of New York,
Since defendants’ counterclaims are not "equitable” within the contemplation of CPLR 4101, defendants, by asserting their counterclaims, have not waived their right to a jury trial on plaintiffs’ legal claims.
Finally, it should be noted that, regardless of the fact that we find no jury waiver by defendants with respect to plaintiffs’
Wherefore, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Walter Tolub, J.), entered May 25, 1995, which denied plaintiffs’ motion to strike a jury demand and sua sponte determined that the jury would serve in an advisory capacity as to equitable claims, should be unanimously affirmed, without costs.
Rosenberger, J. P., Williams, Tom and Mazzarelli, JJ., concur.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered May 25, 1995, affirmed, without costs.
Notes
It should be pointed out that the fact that a plaintiff may have waived its own right to a jury trial by joining a legal claim with an equitable claim will not affect a defendant’s entitlement to a jury trial on plaintiff’s legal causes of action (4 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac 4101.37).
