149 N.Y.S. 857 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1914
This action is based upon a judgment of the City Court of the city of New York, alleged in the complaint to have been “ duly ” given on the 24th day of May, 1895.
The complaint alleges plaintiff to be a corporation.
“ II. That on the 24th day of May, 1895, in an action in the City Court of the city of New York, * * * judgment was duly given and made by said court * * * in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant * * * which judgment was on that day duly filed and docketed * * *.
“ III. That the said judgment was duly rendered upon personal service of the summons on the defendants, * * *.
‘ ‘ IV. That more than ten years have elapsed since
The defendant herein interposes an answer substantially as follows :
First. Upon information and belief denies each and every allegation contained in paragraphs 2, 3 and 4.
Upon motion the court directed judgment for plaintiff upon the pleadings.
The appellant insists that the defense set up in the answer was sufficient.
It is, I think, apparent that all of the material facts set forth in the complaint and which are denied “ upon information and belief ” in defendant’s answer are either facts of which he must be presumed to have had personal knowledge or facts the truth of which was a matter of computation, or the truth or falsity of which could easily have been positively ascertained by an examination of open public records close at hand. Under the authorities the denial of want of sufficient information to form á belief as to such facts would be insufficient. City of New York v. Matthews, 180 N. Y. 41; Rochkind v. Perlman, 123 App. Div. 808.
The appellant, however, in effect claims that the authorities above cited do not apply to the case at bar for the reason that the denial is not of want of sufficient knowledge or information, but is rather in the nature of an affirmative allegation that defendant denies the facts stated in the complaint upon information and belief, that is, that he has information that they are false. I do not think that the distinction is sound. The basic reason of the rule is that defendant should not be permitted to make an evasive denial and create useless issues, but should be required to deny positively all alleged facts which are either presumptively within his personal knowledge or the truth or falsity of which is easily ascertainable from the public records.
The defendant lays much stress upon the allegation in the complaint that the judgment sued upon was “duly” given and made in favor of plaintiff, maintaining that his answer in its form put in issue the question whether or not such judgment was “ duly ” given.- An examination of the records would probably have disclosed whether or not the judgment was “ duly ” given, and I do not see why the denial of this conclusion which was equally ascertainable by examining the records is not covered by the same rules that govern the denial of the other allegations set forth in the complaint.
While in an action upon a judgment the Code permits a party plaintiff to plead the conclusion that a judgment was “ duly ” recovered (§ 532), it further provides that said conclusion may be ‘ ‘ controverted. ’ ’ The Code does not use the word “ denied,” and under the authority of the case of City of New York v. Matthews, supra, I think, in order to have raised the issue as to the jurisdiction of the court or invalidity of the judgment, the facts showing such want of jurisdiction, or which constituted such invalidity, should have been pleaded or that the other facts alleged in the complaint should have been positively denied.
Lehman and Delany, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.