6 N.Y.S. 411 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
This action was brought to recover the face value of 20 mortgage bonds of $1,000 each, issued by the defendant; the plaintiff claiming that the defendant had defaulted in the payment of the interest thereon, and that under the option contained in the defaulting clause of the bonds he had a right to claim that the principal thereof was due and payable. It was held upon the trial, not only that the answer did not set up any defense, but that it did not controvert any allegation upon the part of the plaintiff necessary to a recovery, and accordingly a verdict was directed for the plaintiff, and from the judgment thereupon entered this appeal is taken. It is claimed upon the part of the plaintiff that the principal of the bond was due and payable. It was provided by the bond that, if default should be made in payment of the interest thereon for 90 days after it became due and payable, and had been duly demanded, at the option of the holder thereof the principal sum with all arrears of interest should thereupon become due and payable; and it is because of this clause of the bond that the plaintiff claims that the bond became due and payable. It will be seen that not only must the interest become due and remain due for 90 days before the holder may exercise the option, but that 90 days must elapse after the interest has been duly demanded; and therefore, without proof of the fact that the interest has been demanded 90 days before the commencement of the suit, there is nothing to show that the plaintiff had a right to exercise the option to claim the whole amount of principal and interest; and that this is the theory upon which the complaint was framed is evident from the allegations therein contained. After alleging that the defendant is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the state of Hew .Jersey, that it issued its bonds, that the plaintiff had become the holder and owner of the bonds mentioned in the complaint, and that the defendant had made default in the payment of the interest, there is an allegation that on a given day, at the office of its agency in the city of Hew York, the plaintiff demanded the payment of said interest, which the defendant refused; and further, that the defendant has made default in the payment of the interest after such application, and that such default has continued 90 days
The denial of the demand contained in the answer, it is claimed upon the part of the plaintiff, was clearly frivolous, and not a denial. In the answer the defendant alleged that it had no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the averments in the fifth, seventh, and eighth paragraphs of the complaint, and therefore denied the same. The seventh and eighth paragraphs of the complaint were the paragraphs relating to the demand and the default after such demand. In support of the proposition that such a denial w'as frivolous, we are cited to various authorities, among which are the cases of People v. Fields, 58 N. Y. 498; Lawrence v. Derby, 24 How. Pr. 133: Richardson v. Wilton, 4 Sandf. 708; Shearman v. Central Mills, 1 Abb. Pr. 187, and Bronson v. Railroad Co., 40 How. Pr. 48. In none of those cases, however, was an answer held frivolous simply because it was upon information and belief. In the case of Bronson v. Railroad Co. it was held, in an action upon a bond, payable to bearer, in the possession of the plaintiff, that the answer, denying any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to whether he was or was not the holder and owner thereof, was frivolous because it raised no issue, not because of the form of the denial. In none of the other cases was the answer held to be frivolous because of such denial, but was stricken out, as shown, for the reason that in those particular cases, from the very nature of the transaction, the defendant must have had personal knowledge as to whether the allegation contained in the complaint was true. In the case of Shearman v. Central Mills, it is true, the answer was stricken out as frivolous, but upon the ground that the denial was in the conjunctive form, and that therefore it was impossible to state whether there had been any material allegation in the complaint denied or not. It is also true that in the case of People v. Fields, in the opinion of the court, the remark is made in respect to the allegation contained in the answer, that the defendant had no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to a fact contained in the complaint; that the allegation did not specifically deny the averment, as it should have done; but it subsequently appears that no such question existed in the case, because the court say the case proceeded upon the recognition, tacit or otherwise, by both parties of the existence of the facts which were averred in the complaint in this respect. But the answer jn that case was evidently different from the one now before the court, because in this answer there is a specific denial. The defendant says that it has no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to those averments, and therefore denies the same, which last clause was evidently absent from the answer in People v. Fields. And from the nature of this case there