183 A.D. 615 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
Plaintiffs complain for libel. After defendant had answered and plaintiffs had replied to the defendant’s fourth separate defense, the defendant moved at Special Term for judgment on the pleadings, and now appeals from the order that denies that motion.
The defendant contended at Special Term, and now contends, that the action does.not lie because the plaintiffs at the time of the alleged libel were doing business under the name of the Fort Greene Beef Company without having filed in the office of the county clerk a certificate setting forth the assumed name, properly acknowledged (Penal Law, § 440), and were, therefore, violators of the law, citing Williams v. New York Herald Co. (165 App. Div. 529); Horan v. Commercial Advertiser Assn. (181 id. 931). The learned Special Term, however, in an elaborate opinion, concluded that the principle of Wood v. Erie R. Co. (72 N. Y. 196) controlled.
I think that, upon the record, the question was not available to the defendant upon this motion. The plaintiffs allege that they were and still are copartners in business under the firm name of Komblum Brothers at No. 1944 Fulton street in the borough of Brooklyn in the city of New York. In the said fourth defense.-the defendant pleads that the plaintiffs were doing business under the assumed name of Fort Greene Beef Company, which was then not the real names of the individuals transacting plaintiffs’ business, and that they had not filed the requisite certificate with the county clerk, all contrary to section 440 of the Penal Law. The plaintiffs reply, denying each and every allegation in said fourth defense, except that they admit that they had not filed a certificate with the clerk of the county of Kings that they were doing business under the name of the Fort Greene Beef Company.
The ord'er is affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Thomas, Rich, Putnam and Blackmar, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.