Boyd v. United States Mortgage & Trust Co.

79 N.E. 999, 187 N.Y. 262, 25 Bedell 262, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 774
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 79 N.E. 999 (Boyd v. United States Mortgage & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd v. United States Mortgage & Trust Co., 79 N.E. 999, 187 N.Y. 262, 25 Bedell 262, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 774 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

The original summons in this action was served on July 25, 1900. In the caption Julia S. Boyd was named as plaintiff and “ The United States Mortgage & Trust Co. as substituted Trustee under the Will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased, and William Z. Greene and Louis R. Taylor, doing business under the name of Greene and Taylor ” were named as defendants. The original complaint which was served on the same date was entitled in the same manner. It alleged that the United States Mortgage & Trust Co. was a domestic corporation and that the defendants Greene and Taylor were partners in the real estate business ; that the United States Mortgage & Trust Co. “ as trustee ” at the time thereinafter mentioned was the owner of the Lorraine Apartment House in the city of Hew York; that for the purpose of inducing persons to become tenants thereof the United States Mortgage & Trust Co. as trustee had constituted as its • agents the defendants Greene and Taylor, who had accepted such appointment; that on Hovember 16, 1899, the plaintiff being desirous of engaging an apartment, and being induced by the defendants’ representations, applied at the offices of the defendants Greene and Taylor for information concerning the same, and was then and there induced by the defendants Greene and Taylor to go to the *265 Lorraine Apartment House and examine the apartments; that being conducted by an employee of the defendants Greene and Taylor, she went into the building, which was at the time, to the knowledge of the defendants, in an unsafe and dangerous condition, inasmuch as certain of the floors and rooms therein were unfinished; that the plaintiff was assured by the defendants Greene and Taylor that the building was safe and that she would run no risk of injury or danger in entering or passing through the same; that relying on this representation and assurance, the plaintiff allowed herself to be conducted therein by Greene and Taylor’s employee, and that while thus lawfully in the building at the invitation of the defendants, and as she was being conducted through the building, the plaintiff, without fault or negligence on her part and while exercising due care, and solely owing to the negligence of the defendants, stepped into a hole or open space in the nature of a concealed trap in the.floor, which could not be seen on account of the darkness of the room, and fell to the story below; by reason of which negligence plaintiff was severely injured to her damage in the sum of $15,000.

Answers denying any negligence were interposed by “ The United States Mortgage & Trust Co. as substituted- Trustee under the will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased,” and by the defendants Greene and Taylor. Hothing more appears to have been done in the action until May, 1903, when a motion was made at the Hew York Special Term in behalf of the plaintiff for leave to amend the summons and complaint by striking out in the caption the words “as substituted Trustee under the Will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased” after the words “United States Mortgage & Trust Co.” The Special Term denied this motion, but its order was reversed by the Appellate Division, which granted the desired leave to amend. (Boyd v. United States Mortgage & Trust Co., 84 App. Div. 466.) The order of the Appellate Division further provided that the plaintiff should serve upon the United States Mortgage & Trust Co. a copy of the amended summons and amended complaint, and that the said corporation should have *266 twenty days thereafter within which to answer the amended complaint. Availing itself of this permission the United States Mortgage & Trust Co. served a new answer under the changed caption on July 15, 1903, in which, in addition to its previous denial of any negligence, it pleaded as a separate defense that the cause of action alleged in the complaint did not accrue within three years next before the commencement of the action.

An order was subsequently entered dismissing the complaint as to the defendants Greene and Taylor, so that when the case came on.for trial in March, 1905, the United States Mortgage & Trust Co. was the sole defendant. The plaintiff recovered a verdict of $1,000 damages upon evidence which is amply sufficient to sustain the recovery; and the. only substantial question presented by this appeal is whether the defendant was not entitled to have the complaint dismissed under its plea of the Statute of Limitations, inasmuch as more than three years had unquestionably elapsed between the time of the accident, ¡November 15, 1899, and the date of the service of the amended summons and complaint changing the title of the action, which was July 15, 1903.

The power of the court to permit an amendment of the summons and complaint so as to show that the defendant is sued individually instead of being sued in a representative capacity is hardly open to serious question. Section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure expressly provides that the court in furtherance of justice’ may amend any process or pleading by adding or striking out the name of a person as a party or by correcting a mistake, in the name of a party. The amendment of the summons and complaint in this case by omitting therefrom “as trustee” after the name of the United States Mortgage & Trust Company was either “striking out the name of a person as. a party ” or “ correcting a mistake in the name of a party; ” and whichever it may have been it was an amendment clearly within the power of the court to allow. The question here is not so much as to the authority to permit the amendment as to the effect of the amendment after *267 it had been permitted. Was the change effected by the omission of the words “ as trustee ” tantamount to bringing in a new party for all purposes, so that the United States Mortgage & Trust Company is to be regarded as not having been brought into court at all in its individual capacity until the service of the amended summons and complaint ?

In 1878 the General Term of the Supreme Court in the second department determined that the Special Term possessed the power to grant leave to amend a summons and complaint by striking out the words “ as administratrix ” after the name of the defendant so that the action might proceed thereafter against the defendant individually. (Tighe v. Pope, 16 Hun, 180.) The suit was brought by an attorney to recover the value of professional services performed for the defendant as administratrix of her husband’s estate. In the summons and complaint the plaintiff described the respondent as administratrix and he prayed for judgment against her as such. A motion was made before trial to amend the process and pleading by omitting the words “ as administratrix ” and otherwise altering the complaint so as to charge the defendant in her individual capacity, but the motion was denied at Special Term on the ground that the proposed change would introduce a new defendant and a new cause of action, which the court had no power to do. The General Term reversed the order, holding that the motion ought to have been granted. The opinion of the General Term was written by the late Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 N.E. 999, 187 N.Y. 262, 25 Bedell 262, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-united-states-mortgage-trust-co-ny-1907.