Brady v. Durbrow
This text of 2 E.D. Smith 78 (Brady v. Durbrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This was not a case of mutual accounts. The plaintiff claimed $249, a balance due upon the purchase of a house, and $225, a claim which a third person had against the defendant for building a tea room, and which claim he had assigned to the plaintiff. The house being unfinished at the time of its purchase, the plaintiff agreed that $500 of the purchase money should remain in the defendant’s hands, and if the plaintiff did not complete the house by a certain day, that the defendant might get the work done by others, and pay for it out of the $500. The house was not completed by the time specified, and the defendant finished it, applying $487 67 of the money in his hands for that purpose. This was equivalent to payment of so much of the five hundred dollars, and reduced the plaintiff’s claim against him, upon this- transaction, to $12 33. The case of mutual accounts, intended by the statute, is, where each party has a claim against the other upon which either party might sue. (Ex parte Mills v. New York Common Pleas, 10 Wend. n. 557, Cowen’s Treatise, 747.)
The defendant having recovered a judgment for costs, was entitled, the case being difficult and extraordinary, to an extra allowance. The Code makes no distinction between a judgment recovered against the plaintiff upon the merits of the matter in controversy, and a judgment recovered against him for costs.
See Ward v. Ingraham, 1 E. D. Smith’s C. P. R. 538.
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2 E.D. Smith 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-durbrow-nyctcompl-1853.