48 N.Y.S. 234 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff" in an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. It was determined in the court below that the plaintiff had an enforcible lien upon the leasehold interest* of the defendant in the premises mentioned in the judgment, and it was directed that such interest be sold and that, out of the proceeds thereof, the plaintiff be paid the amount- of his lien with various costs and charges in addition thereto. It appeared in evidence that the plaintiff and the defendant Fleisehman entered into a contract in writing by which the plaintiff undertook to do-certain work and furnish certain material for the completion and decoration of a store in which the defendant named carried on the business of a florist. By the terms of the contract the plaintiff was-to be paid the sum of $5,375 for all the work to' be done and materials furnished thereunder. He was paid on account the sum of' $3,000. After various interferences caused by Fleisehman,'which rendered it impossible for the plaintiff to complete the work, the defendant named prevented the further performance of the contract altogether. At that time all the materials had been furnished and the work completed, except to the value of about $240. On tlm 25th of September, 1896, within the time allowed by law, the plaintiff duly filed a notice, of lien in the office of the clerk of the city' and county of Hew York, and claimed thereby that he was entitled to the sum of $2,135, the unpaid balance of the contract before-mentioned.
The answer admits the making of ■ the contract, but one of the defenses interposed is a denial of the allegations of the plaintiff respecting performance. Upon that issue the evidence abundantly-established the merit of the plaintiff’s claim and fully justified the
Another of the defenses interposed was, that there -was another action pending between the same parties with reference to the same subject-matter. The present action to foreclose the Hen was begun on the 12th of October, 1896. On the 9th of September, 1896, the defendant Fleischman brought an action in this court, and in the complaint therein claimed that, by reason of a breach of the contract between this plaintiff and himself, he, Fleischman, sustained great damage; and judgment was demanded therefor. The.pendency of this action at law, it is claimed, is a good plea in abatement of this suit in equity, and it is further insisted that all that is in controversy between- the parties here was necessarily embraced in the issues in that action, and that the plaintiff here was bound to set up his claim to enforce his Hen by way of counterclaim in. that action. That to some extent the action at law involved the same general inquiry as
The foreclosure of the lien, therefore, was not a matter necessarily involved in an issue raised in Fleischman’s common-law action, and the plaintiff is not precluded from maintaining this suit by reason of thé pendency of that action.
But it is further insisted that the defendant Fleiscliman was entitled to a trial by jury. That he had no such absolute right is fully settled. (Schillinger Cement Co. v. Arnott, 86 Hun, 182; affd., 152 N. Y. 584, where it is held that the character of an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien being strictly that of a suit in equity, it is to be tried in the same way as actions for the foreclosure of mortgages, and that the constitutional provision ■respecting the preservation inviolate of the right to a trial by jury does not invalidate the provision of the Mechanics’ Lien Law
■ It- is provided by section 974 of the Code of Civil Procedure that, where a defendant interposes a counterclaim and thereupon demands an affirmative judgment against the plaintiff, the mode of trial of an issue of fact arising thereupon is the same as if it arose in an action brought by the defendant against the plaintiff for the same cause of action stated in the counterclaim, and demanding the same judgment. It has been held that that provision of the Code does not give a defendant so situated the absolute right to a jury trial of the issues of fact arising on the counterclaim.
In Mackellar v. Rogers (109 N. Y. 472) it is said: “ It is to be conceded that the mode of trial of -the issue tendered by his counterclaim might be the same as if it had arisen in an action. But a counterclaim in an equity suit is not a case where a right to a jury trial existed at common law. (Chapman v. Robertson, 6 Paige, 627; Jennings v. Webster, 8 id. 503.) It is not secured by.the Constitution. It is not to be had as of course, for the action is not within section 970 of the Code (supra), the complaint demanding judgment other than for a sum of money. It is conferred by statute (§ 974) and so is within section 970 (supra), which requires an application upon notice to the court for an order directing the questions arising upon the issues to be stated for trial.” In the case before us an application on notice had been made and was denied, but with leave to renew. The motion was not renewed. Instead of doing so the
Barrett, Rumsey and Williams, JJ., concurred; Yah Brunt, P. J., concurred in result.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.