126 N.Y.S. 714 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1911
Plaintiff brought this action, based upon a verified complaint, which alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement, by the terms of which plaintiff agreed to purchase of the defendant the business of selling coal, wood and ice from a basement located in the premises at 51 Third avenue, borough of Manhattan, New York city; that the agreed price was $480, of which plaintiff paid down $100, and the possession of the premises was to he given and the balance of the money paid within one week; that the defendant, to induce the plaintiff to enter into said agreement, falsely and fraudulently represented that the defendant’s immediate landlord had a long lease of the premises an-d that the defendant had an agreement whereby the defendant, or his assigns, were entitled to remain in possession of said premises until the expiration of said lease; that in fact said lease had already expired, or was about to expire, at the time said agreement was made, and that such statements were false and known so to he by the defendant when made.
The plaintiff obtained a judgment for the amount of the deposit aforesaid, and in the judgment and docket it was stated, pursuant to the provisions of section 251 of the Municipal 'Court Act, that the defendant was subject to arrest and imprisonment; and an execution was issued thereupon which provided that, in case the amount thereof could not
The defendant claims that the motion was not to amend or modify a judgment, but wa-s an application to “ stay an execution issued out of the court.” There is no authority in the Municipal Court Act permitting -a justice of that court to “ stay an execution ” by striking from it the provision requiring the arrest and commitment of a defendant. If we were to. consider it as an application for that purpose only, the order made therein was clearly unauthorized and the court without- jurisdiction to make it. The motion was, however, unquestionably, one to amend the judgment in the respect pointed -out; and the order as made directs “that any reference in the judgment that the defendant is liable. to -arrest and imprisonment be and the same is hereby stricken from the said judgment and from the docket wherein -the same is entered.” The right to i-ssue a body execution depended upon the insertion of those words in the judgment and, with those words stricken out, no body execution -could issue, so that it was the judgment that was amended and not the execution stayed. It must, therefore, be determined upon this appeal whether or not the court below was authorized to amend the judgment in the manner pointed out. The return does not show that objection-was taken in the -court below that the motion was not made within the five days specified in section 254 of the Municipal Court Act; and, unless such objection is taken, it must be deemed to have been waived. Krakower v. Davis, 20 Misc. Rep. 350; Scharmann & Sons v. Bard, 60 App. Div. 449. A verified complaint having been served, it is conceded that no indorsement upon the summons, asserting that the defend
Subdivision. 3 of section 56 of the Municipal Court Act reads as follows: “ Where the defendant has been guilty of a fraud in contracting the debt, or incurring the obligation for which the action is brought * * * except that no order of arrest shall be granted in an action specified in this subdivision where the debt contracted or the obligation received over all payments and set-offs or the property taken, obtained or converted, amounts to, or is valued at one hundred dollars, or less.”
The phrase in said section, “ where the defendant has been guilty of a fraud in contracting the debt, or incurring the obligation for which the action is brought,” applies only to those cases where a cause of action exists without regard to any fraud that may have been used in contracting or incurring it, except, of course, if no fraud has been used then no. order of arrest can be obtained. In other words,
The case of Smith v. Corbieri, 3 Bosw. 634, is an authority to the same effect. In that case the action was for false aiid fraudulent representations of the defendant as to the means and pecuniary responsibility of a third party to whom plaintiff was thereby induced to -sell some goods. There the order of. arrest was sought to be sustained under the same -subdivision and the court said: “ The order cannot be sustained under stibd. 4 of- section 179 of the Code,
The case at bar is purely one "for fraud and deceit. Without the allegation and proof of fraud no cause of action existed and no judgment could have been obtained. The defendant had contracted no debt, nor had he incurred any obligation; and except for his fraudulent statements the plaintiff could not recover. Hence the plaintiff had no cause of action under this subdivision. It will also be seen that the first position taken by the respondent is equally untenable. Subdivision 1 of section 56 provides that an order of arrest may be granted “ in an action for the recovery of damages * * * when the action is for wilful injury to person or property.” It is clear that the plaintiff’s cause of action was for willful injury to property. The term “ willful ” has been defined in the case of Duncan v. Katen, 6 Hun, 1; affd., 64 N. Y. 625. In that case the court points out that by injury to property, is not, necessarily, meant the actual damage or destruction of the articlé itself. The court in that case, at page 4, said: “ The property is the right and not the thing — the right to have, use -and enjoy the thing securely and unmolested—and whenever that right is disturbed or delayed the law gives an action for the injury irrespective of the condition of the thing to which the right of property exists.” In that case a clerk of the plaintiff had delivered about $20,000 in gold certificates to the defendant. She concealed them with the express intention of fleeing the country with her confederate. This was held to be a willful injury to property. In the case at bar, the plaintiff was deprived of his property by and through the defendant’s fraud and deceit, and thus the
That case applies only to an action to foreclose a lien and has no application to the facts in the case at bar.
It follows that the order must be reversed, with costs, and the judgment as originally entered reinstated.
Beady and Gavegaet, JL, concur.
Order reversed.