130 Misc. 583 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1927
The complaint sets up two causes of action, the first by Harold Weis to recover for personal injuries in the sum of $3,000, claimed to have been inflicted upon him by the defendant in what is described as a billiard parlor conducted by the defendant, and the second by John B. Weis to recover the sum of $1,000 for loss of services and for medical care and attendance in the treatment of the infant for said injuries. In their complaint the plaintiffs demand judgment for $4,000, with costs and disbursements. The defendant moves to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that this' court has no jurisdiction in actions to recover money where the complaint demands judgment for more than $3,000, By section 16, subdivision 1, of the City Court Act, which became effective January 1, 1927, it is provided: “ The city court of the city of New York shall have original jurisdiction concurrent with the supreme court of the state of New York in the following cases: 1. In actions for the recovery of money only * * * in which the complaint demands judgment for a sum not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000) and interest * * This statute followed the adoption of the amendment of the judiciary article of the Constitution of the State of New York, article VI, section 15 of which reads as follows: “ The City Court of the city of New York is continued, and, from and after the first day of January in the second year following the adoption of this article, it shall have the same jurisdiction and power throughout the city of New York, under the name of the City Court of the City of New York, as it now possesses within the county of New York and the county of Bronx, and original jurisdiction concurrent with the Supreme Court in actions for the recovery of money only in which the complaint demands judgment for a sum not exceeding three thousand dollars, and interest * * *.” (Italics mine.) Prior to September 1, 1911, the jurisdiction of this court extended, inter alia, to cases against a natural person or against a foreign or domestic corporation wherein the complaint demanded judgment for a sum of money only; but, with certain exceptions not material to the question here, in those cases it was provided that the sum for which judgment could be rendered in favor of the plaintiff could not exceed $2,000, exclusive of interest. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 315, 316.) By Laws of 1911, chapter 569, an attempt was made to increase the amount for which judgment may be rendered in favor of the plaintiff from $2,000 to $5,000, but the act was held unconstitutional (Lewkowicz v. Queen Aeroplane Co., 207 N. Y. 290), and the limitation of $2,000 stood without change until the adoption of the constitutional amendment at the general election in 1925. In Ralli v. Pearsall (69 App. Div. 254, 256, 257) it was