Filed Date: 5/12/1970
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Order entered January 7, 1970, dismissing the third-party complaint and vacating notices of deposition thereunder affirmed, with $30 costs and disbursements to the third-party defendant-respondent. We agree that “ the intendment of the pleaders is reasonably clear.” That intendment, however, is clearly spelled out in the complaint without the necessity of torturing it into another meaning that it does not possess. In simple English, the complaint charges active, participating negligence on the part of all three defendants therein named, as joint tort-feasors. There is absolutely nothing in either the complaint or the bill of particulars which may be read, on any reasonable construction thereof, as a claim that defendant-appellant, the would-be third-party plaintiff, stands charged with passive negligence. Accordingly, the third-party complaint, which is drawn on the theory that defendant-appellant was, if negligent, only passively so, may not stand, and was properly dismissed (Coffey v. Flower City Carting & Excavating Go., 2 A D 2d 191, affd. 2 N Y 2d 898), and, of course, vacatur of notices of deposition thereunder must follow. Nor, in reviewing Special Term’s order, do we overlook or discount the inordinate delay in defendants-appellants’ commencement of the third-party action: the accident occurred in July, 1966; the main action was commenced before the end of that year; the third-party action was not started until April, 1969, long after completion of all depositions in the main action and the filing of a statement of readiness therein. (See Todd v. Gull Contr. Co., 22 A D 2d 904.) Concur — Capozzoli, J. P., Markewich and McNally, JJ.; McGivern and Steuer, JJ., dissent in the following memorandum by Steuer, J.: We believe the order appealed from was improperly granted' and that the cross complaint together with the notices of examination dependent upon it should be reinstated. According to the complaint plaintiff was injured while unloading a shipment of steel girders from a truck. It is alleged that the girders were delivered by the moving defendant (Congaree), which defen