Naylor v. Schenck

3 E.D. Smith 135 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1854

By the Court. Woodruff, J.

The only question presented by this appeal is this: Where a defendant has commenced an action for damages for the breach of a contract made by the plaintiff, and thereafter the plaintiff brings a cross action upon the same contract against the defendant, may the defendant recoup his damages in the latter action', or does the pendency of the former suit prevent it ?

In this case the plaintiff brought his action in the Marine Court for rent due on a lease. The defendants, by way of defence, setup the non-performance of the covenants in the lease by the plaintiff, and claimed to recoup their damages. It appeared on the trial in the Marine Court that before the commencement of this suit the defendants had brought an action in the Supreme Court for the recovery of those same damages, which action was still pending. The Marine Court thereupon held that the defendants were precluded from giving any evidence in support of their answer, and ordered judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount of his claim.

The court seem to have regarded the pendency of the other action as a sort of abatement of the defendants’ plea, or to have deemed the bringing of the suit (by the defendants) in the Supreme Court as a conclusive election to prosecute a cross action and not to recoup or use the "claim as a defence under any circumstances while that action should continue.

There is in this holding a misapprehension of the defendants’ position. They are not prosecuting two actions, one of which abates the other. In an endeavor to recover their damages, they find themselves prosecuted by their adversary. They may defend by setting up any matter which the law recognizes as a *138defence, whether it be a cause of action or whether it be a judgment actually recovered thereon—the only difference being that after judgment it must be used as a judgment and by way of set-off.

The election made by the defendants was not an election not to recoup. At that time it was an election between prosecuting to establish their claim or suffering the injury without seeking any redress.

And when the plaintiff forced them into court upon the claim for rent, the opportunity to use their claim by way of defence first arose, and they had a right to embrace it. Until judgment in one of the suits, the right to press the claim in either form continued. Such was the view of the subject taken in Swan v. Bean, in this court, April General Term, 1850.

It is undoubtedly true that when a defendant has actually used his claim for damages by way of recoupment, and judgment thereon has been pronounced, the claim is barred and no action thereon can be sustained by him; and, on the other hand, when judgment has been pronounced in his own action therefor, he cannot use the claim by way of recoupment in the action brought against him. (See 3 Hill, 174, and note.) But it nowise follows that the pendency of the action prevents the use of the claim therein as a defence to a cross suit afterwards brought, and the plaintiff’s counsel point us to no case in which it has been so held or intimated.

The principles governing the defence of set-off are, in this respect, distinctly applicable to the subject, and it was held, so early as in the time of Lord Mansfield, that the pendency of a prior action for a defendant’s claim did not prevent his using it as a set-off—not even if his prior action had progressed to a verdict—Busherville v. Brown, 2 Burr, 1229—and see Evans v. Prosser, 3 T. R. 186, that it is no objection to a plea of set-off that the defendant has brought an action against the plaintiff for the same sum, not even although the plaintiff has paid the money into court in such former action. (See decisions in this country to the like effect; Stroh v. Uhrich, 1 Watts and Sergt. 57; Bell v. Cogswell, 1 Ashmead, 7).

*139It is not like the case of Allaire v. Whitney, 1 Hill, 486, in which it is held that an affirmance of a contract, by using the benefits secured thereby, is an election which forbids the party to afterwards declare it void. Here the defendants have uniformly and persistently claimed damages for the breach of contract ; no waiver can be alleged against them.

Again it was distinctly held in this state, in Lightbody v. Potter, 10 Wend. 534, that a plaintiff in the Supreme Court may, before trial there, set off his claim against a demand of the defendant, prosecuted by the latter in a justice’s court; in other words, the pendency of the action in the Supreme Court does not prevent the set-off.

This is in every principle a substantial decision of this appeal.

The judgment should be reversed.

Judgment reversed.

midpage