49 Misc. 50 | New York County Courts | 1905
After the services alleged in the complaint were rendered, the defendant sued the plaintiff, in Justice’s Court, upon a promissory note, and recovered judgment (upon default) ; and the defendant contends that the plaintiff herein is now precluded by the provisions of sections 2947 and 2948 of the Code of Civil Procedure from maintaining this action. <( Where the defendant, in an action to recover damages upon or for breach of a contract, neglects to interpose a counterclaim, consisting of a cause of action in his favor to recover
It appeared upon the trial, by the evidence of the plaintiff, that there was an arrangement between the parties that the value of the services rendered by the plaintiff (the claim in this action) should be applied upon the note held by the defendant; which was the only claim the plaintiff owed the defendant and was the note upon which the defendant recovered judgment. The defendant also invokés the well-known rule, so emphatically stated in the text books and cases, that ■a judgment is conclusive of all matters essential to the adjudication. That, in this case, the judgment in favor of the present defendant upon a promissory note was, in fact, a determination that the same had not been paid, which is undoubtedly correct; and that it also necessarily determined that nothing was due the plaintiff in this action for services, which is the point in issue in this case. Binck v. Wood, 43 Barb. 315, states the doctrine advanced by the defendant, and with which I have no contention. In the Binck case, the defendant, Wood, in a former action (which was not defended) recovered judgment for the full amount of a promissory note, and did not give credit for $100', which concededly had been paid thereon. Binck, a surety of the maker of the note, brought an action to recover the $100' so paid, which the court held could not be maintained.
We must bear in mind that the determination of the question whether the plaintiff is precluded from maintaining an action is to be determined, solely, by the provisions of section 2947 and 2948, heretofore cited; and that a case which did not arise in Justice’s Court under the same or a similar statute cannot be held to be a decisive authority. And also that, independent of the sections of the Code mentioned, many of the cases cited are not in point because the defense, which
The courts have defined the meaning of liquidated demand in language so broad that almost any claim short of damages for an assault and battery might be embraced in the definitions given; but, upon principle, and under the cases, it seems to me that the plaintiff’s claim was unliquidated. "
The number of days he worked for the defendant was the subject of serious dispute, and of conflicting evidence. The value of his services was- also in controversy. The claim, so far from being liquidated, varied from seventy-five dollars, which the jury might have determined from the plaintiff’s evidence, to about twenty-five dollars, if they believed the evidence of the defendant and his witnesses (I only state from memory). In Nassoiy v. Tomlinson, 148 N. Y. 326, Mr. Justice Vann, on page 330, used this language: “A demand-is not liquidated even if it appears that something is due, unless it appears how much is due.”
Motion for nonsuit denied.