4 N.Y.S. 918 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The action was by the assignee, for the benefit of creditors, of the firm of Howes Bros., agents, to recover a balance of the contract price of goods and material, for house finishing, manufactured and sold by his assignors to the defendant; and, as a second cause of action, for the price and value of a small quantity of goods outside the contract, sold and delivered by the plaintiff’s assignors, to the defendant, at his request. The contract upon which the first cause of action was based was in writing, and was executed in the name of Howes Bros., and described the parties of the first part by that name. But the undisputed evidence in the ease was to the effect that the firm was properly known by the name of “Howes Bros., Agents;” that it consisted of Lewis D. Howes and Sarah M. Howes, the wife of his brother; that the contract was in fact negotiated and executed by Lewis D. Howes for the firm of Howes Bros., agents; that the goods were manufactured and furnished to the defendant by the firm of Howes Bros., agents, and the payments made thereon by the defendant were made to that firm. The plaintiff is the assignee of Howes Bros., agents, and as such brings this action. On the trial the defendant moved for the direction of a verdict in his favor on the ground, in substance, that the plaintiff was not shown to be the owner of the cause of action based upon the contract in evidence, because the contract was made by the firm of Howes Bros., and the assignment to the plaintiff was made by Howes Bros., agents. This motion was properly disposed of by the judge at the circuit, with the remark that it was immaterial in what name the contract
The question argued on this appeal relates to the allowance of the defendant’s alleged counter-claim, and was raised, if at all, by the motion of the defendant, made at the opening of the case, and renewed at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, for judgment on the pleadings, in favor of the defendant, for the excess of that counter-claim as pleaded, over, the balance unpaid on the contract with the plaintiff’s assignors. The counter-claim set up by the amended answer was—First, for express charges to the amount of $12, paid by the defendant at the request of the other party to the contract, which, under the contract, should have been paid by the latter; second, for money to the amount of $1,854.94, necessarily paid out by defendant to supply deficiencies in the performance of the contract on the part of the other party thereto; third, for damages to the amount of $1,200 for delays in the delivery of the goods and material contracted for, such damages being, as alleged, liquidated by the contract at the sum of $10 for each day’s delay, and the days amounting to 120. So reply was served in the action, and the motion above mentioned was made upon the ground that the counter-claim was admitted by the plaintiff as it was set up in the answer. A marked change has been effected in the law of counter-claim by the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure. Under the former Code a counter-claim was required to be a cause of action existing in favor of the defendant, and against the plaintiff, upon which an affirmative judgment might be had by the former against the latter. Code Proc. § 150. Under that rule a cause of action existing in favor of a defendant against the assignor of the plaintiff could not constitute a counter-claim, although it might be pleaded as a set-off, and be applied in extinguishment, in whole or in part, of the claim of the plaintiff who sued as assignee; and such a plea did not require a reply to put it in issue. Vassear v. Livingston, 13 N. Y. 258; Frick v. White, 57 N. Y. 103. ■ Under the present Code the term “counter-claim” (subject to other prescribed limitations) includes any cause of action in favor of the defendant which tends in any way to diminish or defeat the plaintiff’s recovery, (Code Civil Proc. § 501;) and in case of an action on an assigned demand (under conditions which include the present case) a demand existing in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff’s assignor “must be allowed as a counter-claim to the amount of the plaintiff’s demand, ” (section 502, subd. 1;) so that under the present statute such a cause of action pleaded by a defendant is denominated a counter-claim, and is subject to the rule of pleading which requires a reply to put in issue the facts therein alleged, (sections 514, 515.) The cases of Vassear v. Livingston and Frick v. White, supra, and others of like import, were decided under the former Code, and do not apply to cases arising under the Code of Civil Procedure. We reach the conclusion, therefore, that the defendant’s answer in this case set up a counterclaim which, except as to the amount claimed, was admitted by failure of the plaintiff to reply. But we do not find that the defendant, on the trial, availed himself of the advantage given him by the state of the pleadings. All the items of his counter-claim were for alleged damages sustained by him by reason of failure of the plaintiff’s assignors to perform the contract on their part, and those damages were unliquidated. The counter-claim was not for “a sum or sums of money fixed by the terms of the contract, or capable of being ascertained therefrom by computation only, ” (Code Civil Proc. § 420;) and therefore the amount claimed was not admitted by failure to reply, but required to be established-by proof as upon an assessment of damages, (Code, §§515,1215.) It is true that the third item of counter-claim, as heretofore stated, was alleged to be for damages liquidated by the contract; but the contract itself was in evidence, and by its terms the $10f>cr diem there mentioned was stipulated to be by way of forfeiture, and not as' liquidated damages. There seems to