196 Misc. 626 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1949
The defendant moves to strike from the reply to his counterclaim a defense that there is an existing final judgment -of this court on the merits determining the same cause of action.
The plaintiffs heretofore moved on an affidavit and supporting papers under rule 110 of the Rules of Civil Practice to dismiss
In my opinion, the defendant is correct in his position. The briefs before me treat rather fully the question when, if ever, an order on a motion is res judicata. The plaintiffs insist that under Bannon v. Bannon (270 N. Y. 484) only a final judgment on the merits can conclude the parties and that since the order on the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss the counterclaim was obviously not such a final judgment, nothing stands in the way of now pleading the defense which Mr. Justice Greenberg has already held insufficient. I do not think the determination of the present motion hinges on the application of the principle of res judicata. What is here involved is merely compliance with the orderly procedure laid down in the Civil Practice Act and the Rules of Civil Practice.
The plaintiffs were under no compulsion to move to dismiss the counterclaim because of what they regarded as the conclusive effect of the prior judgment. They were free to set up the judgment in their reply and to tender that issue for trial in regular course. They chose, however, to adopt the alternative and to move under rule 110. I am persuaded that under the rules, after the denial of such a motion the defeated party may not, without the court’s permission, set up the same facts as a defense in their reply. Rule 108 specifically provides that on the denial of such a motion addressed to the complaint the court “ in its discretion may allow the same facts to be alleged in the answer as a defense. ’ ’ The concluding sentence of rule 110 makes rule 108 applicable to the determination of a motion under rule 110. The court very often grants permission to set up in a pleading an affirmative defense on the denial of a motion under one of these rules. Such permission has, however, not been given here.
The defense, as now pleaded, adds nothing new but is a mere amplification of the plaintiffs’ claim that the .earlier judgment concludes the issue here.
Accordingly, the motion to strike the first defense from the. reply is granted, but without prejudice to an application by the plaintiffs for leave to plead this defense. Settle order.