Grossman v. Loeber Hair Co.
This text of 155 N.Y.S. 1012 (Grossman v. Loeber Hair Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The defendant, a foreign corporation, was erroneously sued as Loeber Hair Company. It does not appear. Judgment was taken against it by default, and the plaintiff has applied ex parte for an order so amending the summons, complaint, and judgment as to conform to its correct name, Loeber Hair Goods Company.
Section 1777 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that a corporation is deemed to have waived any mistake in the statement of its name, unless the misnomer is pleaded by it; and it has been held that such waiver takes place, irrespective of whether it appears or suffers a default. Whittlesey v. Frantz, 74 N. Y. 456. Consequently, aside from the later rule adopted in Stuyvesant v. Weil, supra, a different rule prevails as to corporation defendants. It seems to be going very far to hold, as was done in Whittlesey v. Frantz, supra, that a corporation which defaults waives a misnomer; and I take it to be the better law, as it is in my judgment certainly the better reason, that such waiver would take place as to a, corporation defendant only where the name stated in the summons is sufficiently similar to its correct name to fairly apprise it that it is the defendant intended.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
155 N.Y.S. 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grossman-v-loeber-hair-co-nynyccityct-1915.