Holyoke v. . Adams

59 N.Y. 233, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 407
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 59 N.Y. 233 (Holyoke v. . Adams) 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
Holyoke v. . Adams, 59 N.Y. 233, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 407 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

The Code of Procedure (§ 177) provides for a supplemental answer, alleging material facts which have occurred after the former answer. The result of the decisions in the Supreme Court, and in the other courts which have passed upon the question, is that this section is a substitute for the former practice, in actions at law of a plea puis darrien, and in actions in equity of a supplemental answer (Bate v. Fellowes, 4 Bosw., 638;Hoyt v. Sheldon, 4 Abb., 59; Slauson v. Englehart, 34 Barb., 198; Brown v. Richards, 4 Robt., 603; Garner v.Hannah, 6 Duer, 262), but with *Page 236 this distinction, that the supplemental answer under the Code does not take the place of the original answer, but is in addition to it (34 Barb., supra), which, indeed, under the former practice had been held to be the case, when the plea puisdarrien was not inconsistent with the former plea. (Rayner v.Dyett, 2 Wend., 300.) Section 469 of the Code continues in force all pre-existing rules and practice of the courts in civil actions consistent with the Code itself. And it has been said that by the force of this section, section 177 must be so administered as that a leave to serve a supplemental answer shall be given, in actions at law, in all cases in which a plea puisdarrien could have been put in as a matter of right. (Hoyt v.Sheldon, supra.) Which case was recognized in Garner v.Hannah (supra), with a limitation that leave must be applied for by motion at Special Term, and the supplemental answer could not be tendered at the trial court, as was the case with the pleapuis darrien, under the former practice; while in Bate v.Fellowes (supra), it was thought that the Code was designed to alter the rule of the former practice, so as to leave the reception of the answer open to a larger discretion than the courts previously exercised on the same subject; but this general remark is qualified, and the discretion supposed to exist, is indicated as no more than to do that upon the motion for leave to serve the supplemental answer, which a court under the former practice would have done after the filing of the plea, on a motion to strike it from the file of the court. Thus the plea would be ordered off the files, if the defendant was chargeable with laches in putting it in, and his motion to be allowed to serve it nunc pro tunc would, in such case be denied (Sandford v. Sinclair, 3 Denio, 269), and it would have been set aside on motion if false, or contrary to justice, or fraudulent; as is to be implied from Jones v. Herbert (7 Taunt., 421). Section 177 in providing for a motion for leave to make a supplemental answer, gives to the court the power and opportunity to look into the facts, before the answer is served, with the same scrutiny which, under the practice more or less supplanted *Page 237 by the Code, was exercised after the plea had been served, on a motion then made to strike it out. And, in the exercise of this power, the court has, in one case at least, required the defendant applying for leave to supplement his answer to abandon his former answer, and to rest his defence alone upon the matter to be set up in the supplemental answer. (Bate v. Fellowes,supra.) And this though, as above stated the authorities are to the end that, under the Code, the supplemental answer is not a substitute for the original answer, but an addition to it. So that it comes to this: That generally a defendant has a right to set up, by supplemental answer, matter of defence which has occurred or come to his knowledge subsequently to the putting in of his first answer, but that he must apply to the court, by motion, for leave so to do, so that the opposite party may be heard, and the court may determine whether there has been inexcusable laches, or whether any of the reasons appear, which are recognized as giving authority for denying the exercise of the general right in the particular instance. And the court must grant leave unless the motion papers show a case in which the court may exercise a discretion as to granting or withholding leave. It is claimed that Medbury v. Swan (46 N.Y., 200) is in conflict with this. There may be expressions there which, if separated from the context and from the facts of the case, are susceptible of such interpretation. It is said that, "the right to allege new matter, by supplemental pleading, is not an absolute and positive right, but is made to depend upon the leave of the court in the exercise of a legal discretion." This statement alone would be in conflict with what is now said. But the next sentence in that case explains and limits that which has just been quoted, to wit: "The application may be refused if the new defence, although strictly legal, is inequitable, or if the application is not made with reasonable diligence. A party may waive his right altogether, or lose it by laches." What is meant in Medbury v. Swan, and I think what is there expressed when the case is taken altogether, is, that there is no such absolute unrestrainable *Page 238 right to plead by a supplemental answer matter newly arisen, as that the court may not control the exercise of the right within the limits which have been long established, by refusing leave thus to answer when long delay has intervened, or fraud is shown, or injustice will be wrought by allowing the new defence. That was a case presenting the question of laches. The motion there was denied below, upon the ground that laches existed. This court held that there was, upon the facts, a discretion to be exercised, and that an order made in the exercise of that discretion was not appealable. But that case is an authority, that the defence of a discharge from indebtedness under the bankrupt law of the United States may be denied, where inexcusable delay in presenting the defence has intervened; which is in accord with decisions under the old practice. (3 Denio,supra.) It is also an authority, that where the facts of the case call for the exercise of the discretion of the Special Term, this court will not review the order made in the exercise thereof.

It is next to be seen whether, in the case in hand, the order appealed from was a discretionary order, or whether the facts of the case warranted the exercise of the discretionary power of the court. I do not think that the facts of the case make any ground for a charge against the defendants, of unwarrantable delay in seeking to interpose their new defence. The time during which delay must be sought for, to be brought against them on this motion, is that elapsing from the obtaining of their discharge until the noticing of the motion. The discharge of one of them is dated the 5th of September, 1873, and that of the other 6th of January, 1874. The order in this action, to show cause, was obtained on the 9th of January, 1874. Nor was this the first attempt of the defendants to avail themselves in this action of the proceedings in the bankruptcy courts. The proceedings in bankruptcy were begun in October, 1872, against one and by the other of the defendants, and they moved for a stay of proceedings in this action pending the application in bankruptcy for a discharge. It thus appears that the defendants *Page 239 were diligent to avail themselves, in this action, of the bankruptcy proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.Y. 233, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holyoke-v-adams-ny-1874.