deGumoens v. Equitable Trust Co.

211 A.D. 399, 208 N.Y.S. 130, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10635
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 26, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 211 A.D. 399 (deGumoens v. Equitable Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
deGumoens v. Equitable Trust Co., 211 A.D. 399, 208 N.Y.S. 130, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10635 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Kelly, P. J.:

Plaintiff, as assignee of the Russo-Asiatic Bank, a Russian banking corporation, brings this action to recover a balance of $543,267.35 alleged to be due his assignor on deposit made by its Shanghai branch with the defendant trust company. But aside from the substantial amount involved in the controversy the question presented by this appeal is simple and elementary in character, to wit, whether a litigant may ignore an order of the court duly made directing service of a bill of particulars.

The defendant having answered the second amended complaint, the plaintiff moved upon the pleadings and affidavits for a verified bill of particulars of certain of the allegations contained in the answer and in the counterclaim therein pleaded. The application was opposed by defendant upon affidavits, and after hearing counsel for the parties an order was made on December 24, 1923, directing service within ten days of a verified bill of particulars of certain specified allegations contained in defendant’s pleading. The defendant did not appeal from the order, but the bill of particulars was not served until June 17, 1924, when it was at once returned to the defendant’s attorneys with an itemized statement of plaintiff’s objections to it upon the ground that it was insufficient. No motion was made to compel the plaintiff to accept the bill of particulars as served, and in July, 1924, the plaintiff applied upon notice and affidavits for an order precluding defendant from giving evidence on the trial in support of the allegations as to which, plaintiff asserted, defendant had failed to comply with the order. The defendant while appearing by counsel in opposition to the [401]*401motion, filed no affidavits explaining its failure to comply with the order or alleging inability to obey it. Under these circumstances the learned justice at Special Term granted plaintiff’s motion, but gave the defendant an opportunity to serve a further bill of particulars in one case where the failure to comply with the order was obvious and on its face inexcusable, and in another instance limiting defendant’s proof to the facts disclosed in the bill of particulars already served. In the third instance of noncompliance with the order, no excuse being offered, the order of preclusion was absolute. The defendant did not take advantage of the permission to serve a further bill of particulars but has appealed from the order.

As already suggested, the appeal presents simple elementary rules of procedure which are binding upon all litigants. The orders of the court duly made and entered and not appealed from must be obeyed, and especially where no reason or excuse is presented for failure to obey them.

It is only necessary to read the order directing the service of the bill of particulars and the answer made thereto by defendant to show that defendant fails to have in mind these elementary rules. Defendant having alleged in paragraph 8 of the answer that “ It was understood and agreed between defendant and said Russo-Asiatic Bank that all sums received by defendant for the account of said Russo-Asiatic Bank should be credited to said Bank in general deposit account,” etc., the order of the court at Special Term directed the defendant to serve a bill of particulars specifying whether the agreement claimed in and by paragraph Eighth of the answer was oral or in writing; if oral, the time and place of the making of the same and the officers or representatives through whom the parties to the agreement acted in making the same; if in writing, setting forth copies of all writings claimed to constitute such agreement.”

There is nothing unusual in this requirement. Such particulars are applied for and granted continually in litigations pending before the court. But I doubt if any litigant has heretofore served a bill of particulars in answer to such a requirement containing the bald statement made by the defendant here, verified by one of its officers: “ 2. Paragraph ‘ Eighth: ’ The understanding and agreement therein alleged was neither oral nor in writing.” And that is all, no explanation, no further statement, and on the plaintiff’s complaint that defendant was simply flouting the order of the court, no affidavit is submitted by defendant in opposition to the order to preclude. It is unnecessary to comment on this procedure [402]*402except to say that it should not be followed. It would seem that an agreement between parties, individuals or, corporations must be either oral or in writing or it is not an agreement; if it is claimed that the alleged agreement is implied from other transactions oral or written, then defendant was compelled to set out the facts; indeed in the order of preclusion the learned justice at Special Term as a matter of grace granted defendant a further extension of time in which to state “ what the defendant intends to rely upon at the trial in support of such allegations.” But defendant refuses to obey the order of the court; it has not taken advantage of the opportunity presented to it to relieve itself from its obvious unexcused default, but proceeds in its points submitted on this appeal to criticise the permission given to it as a matter of grace by the Special Term, to inform plaintiff upon what it intends to rely in support of this alleged agreement which is not oral or in writing, on the ground that the language used by the court is “ ambiguous.” We think the order appealed from in this particular was right and that it should be affirmed.

Defendant having alleged in the 9th paragraph of the answer that on October 27, 1920, there was a credit balance in favor of the Russo-Asiatic Bank, plaintiff’s assignor, on transactions between the Shanghai branch and defendant, the court had directed the defendant to serve a bill of particulars “ specifying the date when the ' transactions through the Shanghai office of said bank ’ (Russo-Asiatic Bank) referred to in paragraph Ninth of the answer had their inception.” Here is the answer to this direction as served by the defendant trust company: “ 3. Paragraph ‘ Ninth.’ The defendant is unable to ascertain the date of the first transaction handled by the defendant for the account of the Russo-Asiatic Bank through the Shanghai office of the Russo-Asiatic Bank, or the date of the first transaction handled by the Russo-Asiatic Bank through the Shanghai office for the account of the defendant.” It is apparent that plaintiff did not get much information from this statement by defendant. Defendant in the 9th paragraph of its answer had pleaded transactions with the Shanghai office of the Russian bank resulting in a credit on October 27, 1920, to the Russian bank of $296,261.63 against which the defendant claimed the right to set off an indebtedness on transactions between the Petrograd office of the Russian bank and defendant amounting to $541,114.96. And when the defendant banking institution is directed to state when the transactions with the Shanghai branch had their inception it answers that it “is unable to ascertain the date.” No explanation or excuse was offered on the motion to preclude. The learned justice at Special Term, realizing that [403]*403business is not transacted in this way in any fine of industry, precluded defendant from offering evidence concerning this allegation. In this court defendant refers to "the answer to another requirement of the bill of particulars in regard to another paragraph of the answer where it was required to state when the “ accounts kept by the defendant of its transactions ” with various offices of the Russian bank had their inception.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 A.D. 399, 208 N.Y.S. 130, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/degumoens-v-equitable-trust-co-nyappdiv-1925.