Dawley v. Brown

16 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 461
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 16 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 461 (Dawley v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawley v. Brown, 16 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 461 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinions

Taloott, J.:

This case has once before been before the General Term, on which occasion it was held, in an opinion delivered by MulliN, P. J., that the action was abated by the pendency of the suit of this plaintiff against Pos and Brown, and the justice at the Circuit followed the decision of this court in nonsuiting the plaintiff, upon the plea of the former action pending and the proof under it. It does not distinctly appear from the opinion of Justice MulliN upon what grounds the plaintiff, upon the former occasion, sought to maintain the position that the plea of another action pending for the same cause did not constitute any objection to the recovery in this suit, and it is to be presumed that all of the aspects of the case were then considered. On the argument of the present appeal, however, the counsel for the plaintiff has insisted upon [463]*463certain views, which he assumes were not called to the attention of the court in the former appeal, and were not considered, and it is, perhaps, well to refer briefly to such views.

The action, commonly called an action of ejectment, is to recover the possession of certain real estate, situated partly in the county of Ontario and partly in the county of Monroe. With certain answers in bar, the defendant sets up the pendency of an action against himself and one George D. Fox, which he avers is for the same cause as that set forth in the complaint, and states that on the trial of this action he will set up the pendency of the former action as a bar to the farther prosecution of this action.”

It is well settled that, under the present system of practice, matters in abatement and matters' in bar may be joined in one answer, and both be tried and decided at one time. (Sweet v. Tuttle, 14 N. Y., 465; Gardner v. Clark, 21 id., 399.)

The plaintiff, however, does not deny that this is the law as now existing under the Code, but insists that in such case it is necessary that the answer of the matter in abatement should conclude according to the ancient form of a plea in abatement, and not be set up as a bar to the action; and upon this ground he takes exception to the form of the answer in this case, or rather to the relief sought by the answer, and says that, in order to be available, it should have concluded that the writ be quashed, or the suit abate. The answer is not now required to contain any prayer for the particular relief demanded by the defendant, or any statement as to what the defendant - may consider to. be the legal effect of the facts he sets up. ’ If he makes any such demand or statement, it is simply surplusage. It is siiffieient if the facts which he avers constitute matter either in bar or abatement, and the plaintiff must himself determine at his own peril whether the facts are sufficient and sufficiently averred to constitute a defense, either in bar or in abatement. The objection made by the plaintiff is to the form of the answer, and not to its substance, and we think if any objection really exists to the form of the answer, it should have been presented by a demurrer, as in Compton v. Green (9 How., 228), and that the plaintiff cannot go down to trial of the issue of fact, and there for the first time raise an objection to the mere form of the answer.

[464]*464Again, tbe plaintiff claims that in this action he is asserting not the title which he claimed when a former suit was commenced, and not the title involved in that action, but another and a subsequent title derived under the deed from Loren Culver to him (the plaintiff), dated July 18, 1869. It appeared on the trial and by the documents produced, or assumed to be before the court, that the plaintiff had conveyed the premises in question to Loren Culver on the 16th day of March, 1857. The former action was commenced on the 7th day of April, 1869, as stated in plaintiff’s points, and while any title which the plaintiff may previously have had, was by his own deed vested in Loren Culver. In the former action the defendant Brown and George D. Fox and a number of other persons were made defendants, and though the judgment roll in the former action was produced on the trial by the plaintiff, it is not fully set forth in the case, so that the precise nature of the action can be seen. The plaintiff, however, states in his points that the former action when commenced was of an equitable character, but precisely what the complaint in that action was for does not appear by the case. It may, however, be safely assumed that the action was in substance, to recover the same land described in the complaint in this case, upon some legal or equitable title claimed by the plaintiff. In fact the plaintiff shows on this occasion, that his complaint in the former action was amended so as to claim the possession of the premises described in the complaint in this case, which are parcel of the premises described in the complaint in the former action as owner in fee, and that the defendant Fox unlawfully withheld the same. In the former action this defendant Brown and George D. Fox did not put in any answer within the time prescribed by law, for what reason and under what circumstances does not in the present case distinctly appear. On the 6th day of July, 1869, the plaintiff, on proof of the default in the said former action of Brown and Fox, two of the defendants, obtained at a Special Term in Monroe county an ex parte order to the effect that the summons and complaint in the former action be amended by striking out the names of, and discontinuing the action as to all the defendants except Fox and Brown, and turning that action as against Fox and Brown into an action to recover the possession of the premises, and that the plaintiff have judgment for the posses[465]*465sion with costs of the action, and declaring that he (the plaintiff) was the owner of the premises in fee simple absolute. On the same day, the plaintiff, at the same court, obtained a further ex parte order in the form of a judgment by default against Fox and Brown, that he recover possession of the premises, and for the costs of that action, and that he was the owner of the premises in fee simple absolute, and entitled to the possession thereof, and particularly describing the premises according to an amended complaint, which he had apparently caused to be filed after the granting of the first order, and before the granting of the second.' And on the same day he issued a writ to the sheriff of Monroe county, in the form of a habere facias, commanding him to deliver the possession of the premises to the plaintiff, and to levy and collect the costs. The plaintiff then went with his attorney and the sheriff upon the premises, and on the seventh day of July procured the attornment to him of various persons in possession, and among others of the defendant in this suit, with an agreement on the part of the defendant, to pay the plaintiff twenty-five cents per week, per head, for pasturing certain cattle on the premises, and acknowledging that the premises had* that day been delivered to the plaintiff by the sheriff of Monroe county. The defendant in this suit, also one of the defendants retained in the former suit by the amendment, liad been from a time anterior to the commencement of the former suit, in the adverse and hostile possession of that portion of the premises occupied by him, under claim and color of a title in fee, and still continued to remain in the actual possession after the formal execution of the writ of habere facias and the formal attornment to the plaintiff.

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60 N.Y. 272 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Sweet v. . Tuttle
14 N.Y. 465 (New York Court of Appeals, 1856)
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Bluebook (online)
16 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawley-v-brown-nysupct-1876.