Citation Numbers: 203 A.D. 226, 196 N.Y.S. 719, 1922 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7164
Judges: Kirk
Filed Date: 11/15/1922
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/27/2024
There are three records, each containing two appeals, in each record one appeal"being from an order made upon application for resettlement of the prior order therein. The appeals are from these orders made in one action; they were argued together and may be more satisfactorily considered together. It would be difficult to create more confusion than appears in these records. The complaint sets forth in two parts a cause, or causes, of action to recover the balances due upon the account:
(1) A claim by plaintiff for castings and materials furnished to defendant and work performed for defendant at its request; for a storehouse furnished at an agreed price and for moneys paid out at defendant’s request, all within the year 1921 and all in the amount and value of $3,113.73; plaintiff admits payments and credits on this account in the sum of $2,345.07, showing the balance due and unpaid, $768.66. .
(2) A claim on account for like items and charges between June 23, 1917, and December 31, 1920, all in the amount of $7,725.95; against which payments and credits on account are ¿dmitted in the sum of $6,312.63, leaving a balance due. and unpaid of $1,414.33. Judgment is asked for the amount of these two balances, with interest.
Upon motion of the defendant an order was made May 19, 1922, as follows: “ Ordered, that the motion be, and the same hereby is, in all respects granted, and it is further
“ Ordered that within twenty (20) days after service, of a copy of this order upon the plaintiff’s attorney, the plaintiff serve upon the defendant’s attorneys an amended complaint in this action,, wherein it shall set forth and number the same, its statement of the facts which constitute its alleged causes of action against the defendant, and make said complaint more definite and certain, as follows:
“1. The kind, character, amount and value of castings and material sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant between January 1, 1921, and December 31, 1921.
“ 2. The amount, if anything, paid by the defendant to the plaintiff on account of said merchandise.” (Then follow eleven other numbered paragraphs containing directions identical in kind.)
“It is further ordered, that the time for the defendant to answer or take such other action to which it may be entitled is extended until the expiration of twenty’(20) days after such amended complaint shall have been served on the defendant’s attorfieys.”
This order was entered in the clerk’s office June 21, 1922, and
The plaintiff appeals from the order entered June 21, 1922, but it complied with the order within the requiredttime and is not prejudiced. Though there are a number of irregularities in the proceeding which would justify the reversal of this order, we conclude that it may be affirmed, without costs.
Plaintiff has also appealed from the order of September 2, 1922, denying his motion for a resettlement of the order of May 19, 1922, by reciting the omitted papers it used on the motion. The motion was denied because of laches. The plaintiff had complied with the order of May 19, 1922, and was not aggrieved by the omission in the recitals in the order. This order may be affirmed, without costs.
The defendant returned the amended complaint and served no answer. Thereupon the plaintiff entered judgment on default on the 18th day of July, 1922, for the sum demanded in the complaint, with costs. At a Special Term held July 29, 1922, upon motion of the defendant, an order was made vacating and setting aside this judgment, which order was entered on the 19th day of August, 1922. The ground upon which the motion was granted does not appear in the order, but, from the affidavit of the defendant’s attorney, upon which the order to show cause which brought on the motion was granted, it appears that the objection to the judgment was that the amended complaint did not comply with the order of May 19, 1922, and this was the sole ground upon which the amended complaint was returned after service. The defendant’s attorney seems to be laboring under the impression that the order of May 19, 1922, directed the plaintiff to separately state and number his causes of action. In this he is mistaken. He should have received the amended complaint. The ground on which the order of July twenty-ninth was made was insufficient.
Upon an affidavit verified July 17, 1922, stating that the plaintiff had not complied with the order of May 19, 1922 (which required the plaintiff to serve the amended complaint) and that the plaintiff is in default by reason of its failure to serve the amended complaint as directed, an order, dated July 20, 1922, was procured directing the plaintiff to show cause why its complaint should not be dismissed; and on July 29, 1922, the return day of the order to show cause, an order was made denying the motion to dismiss the complaint upon cotidition that within ten days after service of a copy of this order with a notice of entry thereof the plaintiff serve upon the attorneys for the defendant an amended complaint in this action wherein it shall set forth and number the same, in accordance with the order of May 19, 1922, and rale 90 of the Civil Practice Act,
The order of May 19, 1922, and the order of September 2, 1922, denying resettlement of the May nineteenth order, should be affirmed, without costs.
The order made July 29 and entered August 19, 1922, should be reversed, with costs and disbursements, and the order of September 2, 1922, resettling the order entered August 19, 1922, should be reversed, except that portion thereof which vacates the restraining order in the show cause order of July 19, 1922, without costs.
The order made July 29, 1922, and entered August 28, 1922, should be reversed, with costs and disbursements, and the order of September 2, 1922, resettling this order, entered August twenty-eighth, should be reversed, without costs.
H. T. Kellogg. Acting P. J., Kiley, Hinman and Hasbrouck, JJ., concur.
Order of May 19, 1922, and the order of September 2, 1922, denying resettlement of the May nineteenth order, affirmed, without costs. The order made July 29 and entered August 19, 1922, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the order of September 2, 1922, resettling the order entered August 19, 1922, reversed, except that portion thereof which vacates the restraining order in the show cause order of July 19, 1922, without costs. The order made July 29, 1922, and entered August 28, 1922, reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the order of September 2, 1922, resettling such order, entered August twenty-eighth reversed, without costs;
Sic. See Rules of Civil Practice, rule 90.— [Rep.