In re Greenbaum

161 A.D. 558, 146 N.Y.S. 969, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5441

This text of 161 A.D. 558 (In re Greenbaum) 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
In re Greenbaum, 161 A.D. 558, 146 N.Y.S. 969, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5441 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Ingraham, P. J.:

The respondent had a lease for an office in a building in the city of New York, and Dr. David L. Haight was the agent for the owners of the building. He failed to pay his rent and gave two notes and two checks in payment, which were not paid, and an action was commenced in the Municipal Court of the City of New York to recover the amount represented by the notes and checks. The defendant demurred to the complaint, and upon some arrangement made by the attorney for the owners of the building or by Dr. Haight, the respondent gave two notes for the amount then due and the action was discontinued and the notes and two checks previously given were surrendered to the respondent. These notes were dated July 19, 1910, one for $250, payable January 2, 1911, and the other for $248, payable on February 15, 1911. On January 2, 1911, when the first note became due, it was not paid and an action was commenced in the City Court of the City of New York by the owners of the building to recover the amount thereof. In that action the respondent interposed a verified amended answer, alleging that this note was given in pursuance of an agreement with Dr. Haight, as representative of the owners of the building, whereby the action commenced in the Municipal Court of the City of New York was to be discontinued without costs, it being expressly understood and agreed between [559]*559the parties, and as a consideration for the withdrawal of the demurrer and the discontinuance of the action without costs, that the said plaintiffs or David L. Haight, their agent and representative, were to institute an action against Henry Block on the said lease, and that the defendant, the respondent herein, was to act as surety, and in the event that the said plaintiffs succeeded in recovering judgment against the said Henry Block, and found themselves unable to satisfy their judgment, then the plaintiffs were to assign the said judgment to the defendant who was to pay to said plaintiffs the judgment so recovered, and that thereafter and pursuant to said agreement and as collateral security, the defendant made, executed and delivered the promissory note set forth in the complaint, it being expressly understood and agreed that no suit was to be commenced on said note, but it was simply to be held as collateral security, and in the event that the plaintiffs recover judgment against the said Henry Block, and after being unable to satisfy the judgment the defendant should refuse to comply with the agreement as aforesaid, then the plaintiffs were authorized and empowered to commence suit on said note. The date of this agreement is not stated in the amended answer, but it is alleged that it was made prior to July 19, 1910, the date of the notes. These allegations were made upon the knowledge of the' defendant and not upon information and belief. The answer was verified by the defendant as “true of his own knowledge, except as to the matters therein stated to be alleged upon information and belief and that as to those matters he believes it to be true.” As there was no allegation upon information and belief, the verification was absolute. The defendant was required to furnish a bill of particulars in that action, and in that he stated “ That heretofore and at the City of New York, during the month of June, 1910 (the precise date being unknown to the defendant), the defendant and David L. Haight, acting on behalf of the plaintiffs, entered into the agreement alleged and set forth in paragraphs marked c fourth ’ and ‘fifth’ in the defendant’s amended answer.” The plaintiff endeavored to have this case placed upon the preferred calendar in the City Court, which the defendant succeeded in defeat- , ing. Finally, when the action came on for trial, the defendant [560]*560consented that the plaintiff should take judgment and he did not then attempt to sustain his defense. In this proceeding the respondent was charged with committing perjury in swearing to this amended answer. The matter was referred to an official referee, who has reported that the amended answer was false, and the respondent committed perjury in swearing to it, and it is upon that report that the case now comes before the court.

The respondent is entirely uncorroborated as to the making of this agreement. Dr. Haight personally testified that he had no such agreement with the respondent, that he never saw the respondent from the time he leased the premises until he saw him before the grievance committee of the Association of the Bar, and that he never had any conversation with him regarding the giving of the notes. The attorney for the owners of the building testified that the notes were given to him on July 19, 1910, and that nothing was said about bringing suit against Henry Block, and that the action in the Municipal Court had been discontinued some time before as the result of a consultation between the attorney for the owners of the building and the partner or representative of the respondent, who stated that if the action was discontinued an arrangement would be made for the payment of the rent due. The attorney for the owners of the building further testified that the action in the Municipal Court was discontinued about the middle of June, and on July 19, 1910, the respondent came to the attorney’s office; that an additional amount of rent had then become due; that the respondent fixed the dates at which he could pay the notes; that the respondent himself drew up the two notes, and signed and delivered them to the attorney for the owners of the building. After the notes had become due the respondent called on the attorney for the owners of the building and offered to pay ten dollars a month on the notes until the notes were paid, and the attorney for the owners of the building refused the offer, and respondent then said he would have to interpose an answer, to which the attorney said, “If you do that you commit perjury,” to which the respondent replied, “ Well, there are ways of putting in answers and you can put an answer in any way,” and then he left. He later interposed an answer and an amended answer.

[561]*561An examination of this testimony satisfies me that the claim of the respondent that he made any such agreement is absolutely without foundation, entirely inconsistent with the testimony of the attorney for the owners of the building, and the whole story is improbable in itself. Block was not a party named in the lease. In it the respondent was described as the only lessee and the only party to it. Block, it seems, intended to occupy a portion of the offices and the respondent procured him to sign the lease. It is unnecessary to decide whether he might have been held responsible for the rent. The respondent was clearly responsible for the rent for which he had given notes and checks, and there was no reason why the landlord should be obliged to bring an action against Block as a condition to bringing an action against the respondent for the amount which he conceded that he owed for rent. There evidently was no consideration for the agreement he alleged, and the claim that the discontinuance of the action in the Municipal Court was consideration for the agreement was obviously unfounded. The discontinuance of the action in the Municipal Court was so obviously for the benefit of the respondent that it could not be any consideration moving to him for a contract with him, and it is also a fact that the action had been discontinued some time before the notes were given. The respondent was concededly indebted for this rent. He concededly gave his promissory notes, which were absolute promises to pay a sum stated at a day fixed by him to discharge that indebtedness.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A.D. 558, 146 N.Y.S. 969, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-greenbaum-nyappdiv-1914.