125 Misc. 168 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1925
The default in this cause arose under the following circumstances: The plaintiff having brought an action for rent for the month of November, 1923, the defendant answered by pleading a general denial and a counterclaim. Thereafter, upon the trial of the action both parties appeared in court with their respective witnesses, and the plaintiff put in evidence a record showing the granting of a final order in summary proceedings previously maintained, which had been obtained by him as the result of the defendant’s failure to pay this rent. The latter thereupon expressed surprise and disclaimed having had any previous notice of such proceedings, and the trial justice then suggested that as he was bound by the record in those proceedings to render judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount, the defendant might better refrain from attempting to prove his counterclaim, let the inquest proceed, and later open his default. The defendant, acting upon this advice, withdrew his witnesses, and the plaintiff obtained judgment by default. The motion to open this was denied, because of the fact that the record in those summary proceedings was held to be res adjudícata as to plaintiff’s right to a judgment.
It is urged by the plaintiff that what the defendant should have done in these premises was to move to open his default in the summary proceedings and not in the present action. Aside from the possible question of laches, this would have been wholly inappropriate, as the defendant had actually vacated his apartment on November 27, 1923, before the warrant upon the aforesaid final order had been executed, but after the issuance of the precept, the due service of which, however, was denied by him. A new trial in summary proceedings, therefore, could not avail him or necessarily have the effect of restoring him to the possession of the premises formerly occupied by him.. It might perhaps have lifted the bar of the conclusion assumed by the court below as having arisen from the outcome of such summary proceedings; but the difficulty is that no such conclusion could arise in consequence of the final order therein.
The Court of Appeals has disposed of this question by the case of Jarvis v. Driggs (69 N. Y. 143), wherein it held that a final order by default in summary proceedings, among other things, only
Order reversed, motion granted, judgment vacated, and cause placed upon general calendar.
All concur; present, Bijur, McGoldrick and Levy, JJ.