Donovan v. Main

74 A.D. 44, 77 N.Y.S. 229
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 A.D. 44 (Donovan v. Main) 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
Donovan v. Main, 74 A.D. 44, 77 N.Y.S. 229 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J. :

The action is brought to recover damages occasioned to the plaintiff by an explosion of chemicals stored on the premises of Tarrant & Co., on Warren street in the borough of Manhattan. The complaint was served November 6, 1901. Certain of the defendants composing the firm of McKesson & Robbins appeared on November 30. The plaintiff served an amended complaint on December 6. McKesson & Robbins served an answer to the complaint of the plaintiff in this action ” on December 24. The plaintiff moved for an order overruling the answer of the firm as frivolous and for judgment and a writ of inquiry to assess damages. The court granted the motion with leave to the firm to amend the answer, handing down a memorandum, Denials in haee verba are not permissible, nor are these denials in gross. The request is that they should be to each ’ allegation., and not of all in gross. Motion granted, with leave to serve a proper and scientific answer within ten days. $10.00 costs to abide. W. J. G.”

The respondent’s counsel argues that the answer does not state that it is an answer to the amended- complaint, and is consequently frivolous. When an amended complaint is served, it alone constitutes the complaint in the action, and the extremely technical objection that the answer, using the words “ to the complaint ” instead of “ to the amended complaint,” is clearly untenable, and was very properly disregarded by the learned court, which based its decision on the ground already stated.

We are thus brought to an analysis of the complaint and answer seriatim. The 1st paragraph of the former alleged in substance that at the times thereinafter mentioned Tarrant & Co. was a domestic corporation engaged in manufacturing chemicals and drug products, and in the storage of chemicals, drugs and other substances which were received from various persons, and were of a dangerous and explosive character, at a building on Warren street, of which Tarrant & Co. was owner and in possession and control. The defendant firm of McKesson & Robbins, on information and belief, denied that Tarrant & Co. was engaged in the business of manufacturing chemical and drug products of a dangerous and explosive character, or in the receiving for storage from various persons of chemicals, drugs and other substances of like dangerous [46]*46and explosive character, at the building named, using nearly the words of the 1st paragraph of the complaint, and adding “as alleged in the paragraph or sub-division of said complaint therein marked or designated I.’ ” This is equivalent to a denial that Tarrant & Co. was, at the time named iir the complaint or at any time, engaged in the specified business.

The learned justice at Special Term held that denials in hæc verba, or in gross are not permissible. We are of opinion that, while this may be true in some cases, it was error as applied to the present-pleadings. When a paragraph of a complaint contains allegations material to the cause of action, the answer may contain a general or specific denial of each material allegation of the complaint (Code Civ. Proc. § 500); that is, it may deny each and every allegation of a paragraph or may use either the substantive words or the exact words of the allegation in making the denial. Either form in the present case constitutes good pleading, and upon the briefs of counsel no reason has been adduced to the contrary. One office of an answer being to form an issue, it is difficult to see why a denial in hceo verba of the 1st paragraph-of the complaint herein does not fulfill such office, or why it is not a specific denial. When a defendant interposes a general denial, either of the allegations of the entire complaint or of a separate paragraph of the complaint, he frames an issue. A denial of all the substantive allegations of a paragraph set out in the language used in the complaint is tantamount to a denial of each allegation of the paragraph.

The counsel for respondent refers to an opinion of the learned justice from whose decision the present appeal is taken, in Durst v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (33 Misc. Rep. 124). From that decision no appeal is reported, and while the parties to that litigation concluded to abide by it, we cannot agree with any portion which is contrary to our views above expressed.

There might be some question under the decisions, whether in certain cases a denial of the allegations of a paragraph of a complaint “ as therein alleged ” might not constitute a negative pregnant, but this is hardly correct where the denial specifically uses all the language of the whole paragraph. It may be that the concluding words of the denial, “ as therein alleged,” are surplusage, but that does not authorize the striking out of the answer as frivolous.

[47]*47It is true that where an answer uses the words of the complaint in such a way as to form a negative pregnant, the pleading is improper. Such an instance may be found in Baker v. Bailey (16 Barb. 54), where the allegation was that on December eighteenth the defendant assaulted a person who by reason of the injuries died on December twenty-fifth. The answer denied that the defendant on December eighteenth committed an assault from which death resulted on December twenty-fifth. The court held that this was a clear case of negative pregnant, because (pp. 55, 56) “ Time and place are immaterial; * * * and the plaintiff could have proved the commission of the injury on any other day than that stated in the complaint. The defendant has denied that he made the assault, and that the deceased died of the injury committed, on the particular days stated in the complaint, leaving the answer pregnant with the affirmative admission that he made the assault, and that the deceased died thereof, on other days than those mentioned in the complaint. Such is the legal construction of the pleading. (Comyn’s Dig. tit. Pleader, R; 5 Dyer, 95, pl. 36; 2 Saund. 319; Bac. Abr. tit. Pleas, No. 6.)

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.D. 44, 77 N.Y.S. 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donovan-v-main-nyappdiv-1902.