217 A.D. 352 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
This action was originally brought by Elias C. Travlos against Commercial Union as sole defendant. The complaint, for a first cause of action, alleged that plaintiff was an agent of the Greek government in securing insurance upon goods shipped from the United States consigned to said government and on the freight charges therefor, and that Commercial Union was a New York corporation doing business as exporter and importer and in securing marine insurance for its patrons; that it held itself out and represented itself to the public as engaged in the business of effecting marine insurance and as having the capability of skilled experts in such business; that in of about June, 1918, the plaintiff in his own name, but for the benefit of the Greek government, employed Commercial Union to procure, and Commercial Union, in consideration of such employment and payment by the plaintiff to it of premiums in the sum of $16,584.28,
For a second cause of action, plaintiff realleged the contract with Commercial Union whereby Commercial Union, in consideration of employment by the plaintiff and payment of premiums in the sum of $16,584.28, contracted to secure insurance in the sum of $175,495, due performance by the plaintiff, Commercial Union’s failure and neglect to procure the agreed insurance, and then, after realleging the other allegations contained in the first cause of action, asked for judgment in the sum of $52,739.56, with interest from August 3, 1918.
On August 13, 1924, on motion of the attorneys for Commercial Union and upon consent of the attorney for the plaintiff, an ex parte order was granted, without notice, to appellant M. Morgenthau, Jr., Co., Inc. (hereinafter called the Company), which joined said
This second amended answer denies many of the material allegations of the complaint. For its claim against M. Morgenthau, Jr., Co., Inc., it alleges that both Commercial Union and said Company were domestic corporations and that Commercial Union was engaged in the import and export business and that the Company was engaged in business as an insurance broker and was duly qualified as such in marine insurance; that on or about June 1, 1918, Commercial Union was requested by plaintiff to furnish $175,495 of marine insurance upon goods and freight to go by the Segur anca from New York to Piraeus, Greece, and that Commercial Union in its turn requested, and for a valuable consideration employed, the Company to procure, and the latter undertook and agreed with Commercial Union to effect in a proper, skillful and diligent manner and to obtain such insurance by suitable underwriters for the plaintiff; that the Company negligently, unskillfully and carelessly and in breach of its duty and obligation to Commercial Union, failed and neglected to effect such insurance, but instead obtained insurance in the sum of £36,946.6.3, which was the equivalent of $175,495 at the rate of exchange of $4.75 existing at the time said insurance was effected. Commercial Union then alleges the shipment of the goods by the Seguranca sailing from New York on July 18, 1918, the total loss of the goods by reason of the wreck of the boat on August 3, 1918, the payment by the insurers of £36,946.6.3, which at the rate of exchange existing at the time of payment was $175,495; that Commercial Union, in placing the insurance, relied on the skill, expertness and experience of the Company, and that by reason of the latter’s action it was damaged in such sum as plaintiff might recover from it, for which amount it asks judgment against Morgenthau Co.
The Company brought on the motion to be heard upon the pleadings above referred to, the ex parte order of August 13, 1924,
The first objection raised against the claim against Morgenthau Company in the second amended answer, which requires consideration, is that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the defendant Commercial Union as against its codefendant. I am of the opinion that this objection is untenable. The answer sufficiently alleges an undertaking by the Company to properly procure for the Union the insurance in question in dollars, which it negligently failed to do, to the Union’s damage in whatever amount plaintiff may recover from the Union. The allegation is that this employment of the Company was for a valuable consideration and the Company was thus under the duty of acting carefully and of carrying out its instructions as to the form of the insurance effected and the currency in which it was payable. The question of the waiver of the terms of the original agreement between the Union and the Company and the acceptance of performance in a different manner, is for the Company to raise by its pleading to the answer, and is not necessary to be anticipated or met in advance by the plea of the Union.
The second objection to the said claim in the second amended answer is that the claim is barred by the Statute of Limitations. I agree with the conclusion reached by the learned court at Special Term, as follows: “ That the relation between the first defendant and the said third party was that of principal and agent or deputy and that said third party was clearly not an independent contractor. Hence the injury complained of resulted from the act or omission of a deputy or agent within the meaning of section 14 of the Civil Practice Act, and when that section is taken with section 193 thereof it should not be deemed to set a limit before which an action can be commenced, but rather a limit after which an action cannot be brought. As section 14 of the said act applies here, the said claim against the said third party is not barred by the Statute of Limitations.”
The third objection to the said claim is that it is not one which may properly be interposed in this action under the. provisions of section 193 of the Civil Practice Act. Subdivision 2 thereof reads as follows: “ Where any party to an action shows that some third person, not then a party to the action, is or will be liable to such
Commenting on this provision, Prof. Carmody in the 1924 Supplement to his New York Practice says (at p. 61): “ Literally interpreted, the third person sought to be included must be liable to the defendant for the claim made against the defendant in the action, that is for the claim stated in the complaint. Such a construction of the language would restrict the application of the subdivision within very narrow bounds. In fact it is difficult to find a case where such a construction would clearly apply. An .action against the master for damages caused by the negligence of his servant might illustrate such a construction, but even there it is not so clear that the servant is or will be liable to the master, for the identical claim stated in the complaint. Plaintiff’s claim may be for personal injuries. The master’s claim is more likely to be a property damage, whereby the estate. of the master is lessened. Other illustrations might be found where such a construction might seem plausible. But it is inconceivable that the Legislature had such sporadic cases in mind when it framed these broad provisions for bringing in third parties. It is more likely that the Legislature intended by such language merely that the third party is or will be liable in whole or in part for the amount represented in a judgment obtained by the plaintiff against the defendant in the action. The cases thus far adjudicated under the subdivision bear out this construction, as will be shown later in this discussion and we shall assume this liberal construction of the word ‘ claim ’ and the phrase in which it occurs to be the correct one in our further treatment of the subdivision under consideration.
“ C. Application of.
“ In actions, therefore, where the defendant included in the action as originally constituted may hold an omitted party liable in whole or in part, either through the application of the principles of indemnity, contribution, or otherwise, for the claim which the plaintiff makes again him, the omitted party may be brought in as a party defendant in the discretion of the court on the defendant’s application and on the defendant’s application only.
“ But where the two sales agreements differ in their terms or where intervening circumstances may have altered the facts under such sales agreements, the defendant may not bring in as an additional defendant the original seller since such third party might not under such circumstances be liable over to the defendant in the action for the claim plaintiff is making against him. Neuss, Hesslein & Co., Inc. v. National Aniline & Chemical Co., Inc., 120 Misc., 164; 197 N. Y. S., 808 (Appellate term).
“ Likewise, in a tort action against the master to recover for personal injuries caused by the negligence of a servant, the servant will be brought in as a party defendant on the application of the master, for a servant is directly liable to his master for any damage occasioned by the servant’s negligence for which the master is liable to another. Fedden v. Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal, 204 A. D., 741; 199 N. Y. S., 9. So, also, where a plaintiff in an action for damages for negligence makes an employer and an employee co-defendants, the employee cannot thereafter be stricken out as a party over the objection of the employer, where the latter is sought to be held under the respondeat superior doctrine. Bessey v. U. S. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corp., 204 A. D., 641; 199 N.Y. S., 15.
“ It makes no difference under the statute that the claim upon which plaintiff is suing is a breach of contract claim and the claim which defendant desires to assert against the third party is based on tort, or vice versa. The statute is satisfied if the success of the plaintiff necessarily establishes the main question of fact which the defendant must establish to pass on, in whole or in part, the liability to the omitted third party.”
Finally, it is urged that the second amended answer and the claim therein contained should be dismissed as to the defendant M. Morgenthau, Jr., Co., Inc., and service of the supplemental summons upon it vacated upon the ground that the order permitting the service thereof was procured ex parte without notice to said defendant. The answer to this objection is that the Morgenthau Company has waived any right it may have had to object either to the manner in which it was brought in or the cross-claim set up against it, by appearing generally in the action and moving to dismiss the cross-claim against it solely on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which was in effect a general demurrer.
The rule as laid down in 31 Cyc. 321 is that “A demurrer to a pleading or portion thereof is a waiver of any objection as to the
It follows that the order appealed from was correctly made and should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, with leave to defendant, appellant, to plead to the second amended answer of the defendant, respondent, upon payment of said costs and ten dollars costs of motion at Special Term.
Clarke, P. J., Merrell, McAvot and Wagner, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed', with ten dollars costs and disbursements, with leave to the defendant M. Morgenthau, Jr., Co., Inc., to plead to the second amended answer of the defendant Commercial Union of America, Incorporated, within twenty days from service of order upon payment of said costs and ten dollars costs of motion at Special Term.