Dahlstrom v. . Gemunder

92 N.E. 106, 198 N.Y. 449, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 819
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 92 N.E. 106 (Dahlstrom v. . Gemunder) 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
Dahlstrom v. . Gemunder, 92 N.E. 106, 198 N.Y. 449, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 819 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

The debatable and ultimate question in this case is whether a reply served by the plaintiff, under an order of the court, to an affirmative defense set forth in defendants’ answer was so insufficient that said defense was to be regarded as admitted, and, therefore, as barring plaintiff’s recovery.

Plaintiff brought his action to recover damages for an alleged breach of warranty of the quality and make of a violin purchased by him of one Hey through the defendants as the latter’s agents. While his complaint showed that defendants were explicitly acting as agents for a known principal, it alleged that they personally did warrant the character of the violin, and that in reliance upon their warranty the plaintiff did purchase the instrument from their principal with the result that defendants collected commissions for the sale. It also sufficiently alleged a breach of the warranty.

The defendants, amongst other defenses, in a verified answer, alleged in substance that prior to the commencement of this action plaintiff had brought an action against their principal, Hey, to recover damages for breach of a similar *452 warranty made by him on the sale of the same violin; that said action was brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the northern district of Hew York, and an answer interposed by said Hey which denied that he gave the warranty counted on, and then further set forth, “■ That such proceedings were had in such action that the plaintiff obtained a judgment therein permitting him to retain said violin and other property purchased from said George W. Hey as part of said purchase contract, and for damages and costs amounting to the sum of $1,750, which judgment was obtained December 20th, 1906, and was duly paid and satisfied in full by the defendant in such action on January 20, 1907,” and then followed the allegation of what was undoubtedly a conclusion of law that said judgment was a satisfaction of plaintiff’s claim in this action and a bar to the maintenance of the latter.

Thereafter an order was made requiring the plaintiff to serve a reply herein in accordance with the provisions of section 516 of the Oode, and it is this reply which calls for most of the discussion necessary on this appeal. Before proceeding to its consideration, however, it will be well to consider the sufficiency and effect of the complaint and answer to which reference has been made.

I have no doubt that plaintiff’s complaint stated a good cause of action against the defendants on a contract of warranty. While ordinarily agents acting for a known and disclosed principal and guilty of no fraud or misrepresentation would not be liable in - any such manner as that in which plaintiff seeks to hold defendants in this case, I know of no reason .why they may not if they see fit, for a good consideration, make a personal contract of warranty which will be binding and enforceable. Such a contract is sufficiently alleged in the complaint. But while this is true, similar contracts of warranty made respectively by the agent and by the principal on' the same sale of an article would not be so independent and distinct that a vendee would be entitled to a recovery against each for the same breach of warranty, and, therefore, to a duplication of damages for the same injury. The con-

*453 tracts of the agent, perhaps, might be regarded as made by him as surety for the principal and to guard against the default of the latter. However this may be, it must be clear that if the vendee recovered full damages and satisfaction from the principal because the article purchased did not correspond with the Avarranty, he could not then bring a second action against the agent and again recover damages. The tAvo contracts guarantee the same thing, and if for the failure of the article to correspond with the warranty full damages have been recovered on one contract that necessarily must be a satisfaction and discharge of the other.

Defendants’ answer set forth such a satisfaction of damages by the principal, and, therefore, a necessary discharge of the agents on their contract. It alleged that a cause of action precisely similar to the one alleged in this action, except that it was directed against the principal instead of his agents, had ripened into a judgment for damages and other rights which had been paid and satisfied. Presumably the judgment Avas for the full amount of damages to which plaintiff was entitled by reason of the breach complained of, and, therefore, its payment was a full compensation for all of the injury which he suffered on the purchase of the violin. This defense, therefore, if admitted, was a bar to plaintiff’s recovery, and we reach a consideration of the reply which plaintiff served, because, if not sufficient, defendants were entitled to move for judgment as they have done. (Code of Civil Procedure, §§ 515, 516.)

Somewhat evasively, but still substantially, plaintiff in his reply admitted the commencement of the action against Hey for a breach of Avarranty on the sale of the violin involved in this action, all as alleged in defendants’ answer. Then, purporting to make reply to the allegations heretofore quoted concerning the recovery and satisfaction of the judgment in said action, he alleged: “ Plaintiff has no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the allegatio ns set forth in paragraph VII (the one in question) of the answer, and, therefore, denies the same.”

This Avas not a sufficient or honest denial under the Code of the allegations in the ansAver. The latter had alleged that in *454 an action admitted to have been brought by the plaintiff in a court of record in this state a judgment had been recovered, and that two years before the reply was made the same had been “ duly paid and satisfied in full by the defendants.” It is quite incredible that plaintiff should have had no knowledge concerning the termination of his lawsuit, and equally inconceivable that after the lapse of two years he should neither have received nor sought information on this subject. Furthermore, the matters alleged were largely of record, and means of information concerning their existence was within the control of plaintiff, and the truthfulness of the allegations a subject of convenient and ready determination. Under such circumstances it was not permitted to him to make a bald and unexplained denial of any knowledge or information. A party may not thus deny the possession of knowledge or information which presumably he has; neither may he purposely tu rn his head and close his eyes and ears for the purpose of avoiding knowledge and information, and of enabling him to make a denial thereof.

While these propositions are well settled, it is true that the course of procedure has not been uniform by which courts have afforded relief to a party who had been imposed upon by a pleading infected with such faults as the present one. Sometimes the remedy has been granted in the form of an order striking out the offending pleading as sham. But, on the other hand, repeatedly it has been granted as in this case, by treating the pleading as frivolous and awarding relief accordingly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.E. 106, 198 N.Y. 449, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dahlstrom-v-gemunder-ny-1910.