Iroquois Door Co. v. Leavenworth Apartment Co.

77 Misc. 462, 137 N.Y.S. 122
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 77 Misc. 462 (Iroquois Door Co. v. Leavenworth Apartment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iroquois Door Co. v. Leavenworth Apartment Co., 77 Misc. 462, 137 N.Y.S. 122 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The action is brought upon a certain promissory note made by the defendant Leavenworth Apartment Company, and indorsed by the other defendants in the action. The note was made payable to the plaintiff.

In answer of the defendants Roberts and 'Stanley, to which the plaintiff demurs, the defendants admit the making and indorsement of the note in question, but allege that the Leavenworth Apartment 'Company had a contract with the Rational Construction Company for the construction of an apartment house for the Leavenworth Apartment Company, and that the plaintiff had undertaken and agreed to furnish certain material and supplies for use in the erection of said building, but that the plaintiff had failed to fulfill the terms of the agreement with the construction company in full or in part, and a controversy and disagreement between the plaintiff and the construction company had arisen because of the failure of the plaintiff to furnish the material for said building as ordered. The answer then contains the following clause:

“ 7. The said defendants further allege upon information and belief, that on or about the 6th day of March, 1912, the plaintiff, the defendant Leavenworth Apartment Company and the Rational Construction Company, entered into an agreement, in and by the terms of which, it was among other things agreed that in consideration of the execution and delivery of the note set forth in the complaint herein by the Leavenworth Apartment Company, and certain indorsers thereon to the plaintiff, the plaintiff would immediately comply with the demands of the Rational Construction Company, and would immediately ship additional materials for said building and replace materials formerly shipped by the plaintiff which had been rejected upon said building, in order that the said building might be rushed to completion within a very short time. That relying upon the promise and agreement of the plaintiff herein to furnish proper and suitable [464]*464materials immediately for the completion of said building, including the fifty doors which had been returned to the plaintiff and rejected, the defendant Leavenworth Apartment Company made, executed and delivered to the plaintiff, the note set forth in the complaint.”

The answer then alleges the plaintiff, in violation of the agreement, failed to comply with its terms, and failed to supply the materials required, and that by reason thereof the completion of the building was delayed and the Leavenworth Apartment Company prevented from taking possession and renting the same, and suffered damage in an amount in excess of the amount of the note. The answer then alleges :

“ That, by reason of the breach of said contract by the plaintiff, the Leavenworth Apartment Company is not at this time in any way indebted upon said noté or otherwise to the plaintiff herein, and that the said note being in the hands of the original payee thereof, these defendants are not liable upon said note, or, if any liability exists, such liability is only as a guarantor of any indebtedness which may be found due and owing from the Leavenworth Apartment Company to the plaintiff upon the trial of this action, and that as between the plaintiff and these defendants there has been by reason of the foregoing a complete and total failure of consideration for the said note set forth in the complaint herein.”

To this answer the plaintiff-demurs, as being insufficient in law.

It is urged by counsel for the plaintiff that the contract to furnish supplies and material was between the plaintiff and the National Construction Company, and not between the plaintiff and the apartment company. Such appears to have been the original dealing, but the clauses quoted allege the subsequent agreement resulting in the giving of the note in question was between the plaintiff, the construction company and the apartment company. The answer, in effect, alleges a special interest of the apartment company in the fulfillment of the contract, and an agreement by the plaintiff with it.

[465]*465It may be the facts will not bear out the allegations when developed on the trial, but for the purposes of this demurrer we must accept the allegations as true, in law.

It is to be noted in this connection that there is no allegation that the note in question did not in fact represent an indebtedness due and owing the plaintiff. Uor is it alleged that the note in question represented the price of material to be furnished under the alleged agreement of March sixth. When the answer is analyzed, it amounts to just this: that the plaintiff agreed to furnish certain material and failed to do so, whereby the defendant Leavenworth Apartment Company suffered damage, and has a cause of action by way of counterclaim against the plaintiff. The cause of action set forth in the answer is an independent cause of action in favor of the apartment company against the plaintiff, the payee of the note sued on. The simple question, therefore, presented is whether these defendants as indorsers of the note of the apartment company can avail themselves of this counterclaim in favor of their codefendant as a defense and offset against their liability as indorsers on the note.

Under the statute the maker and the indorsers of the note in question are jointly and severally liable on the instrument, though sued as jointly liable. In the recent case of American Guild v. Damon, 186 N. Y. 360, it was held that, in an action to foreclose a mortgage executed by a husband and wife to secure the payment of their joint and several bond, the husband might, under section 501 of the Code of Civil Procedure, counterclaim and set off a claim existing in his own favor, and the allowance thereof inured to the benefit of both defendants, and the fact that the action is in form joint does not affect the principle.

In this very aqtion the Leavenworth Apartment Company has interposed an answer setting up substantially the same facts alleged in the answer of the defendants Roberts and Stanley, save that in the answer of the apartment company the claim for damages is set up as a counterclaim, rather than as an offset. If the apartment company succeeds in the alleged defense, then whatever reduction is thus obtained on the plaintiff’s claim inures just to that extent to the benefit of the indorsers on the notes. Why, then, may not [466]*466the indorsers, by answer, claim for themselves the benefit of such a reduction by offset against liability upon pleading the same facts ?

In the case of American Guild v. Damon, 186 N. Y. 360, the court, in its opinion, cites with approval the case of Parsons v. Nash, 8 How. Pr. 454, where the opinión'was written by Mr. Justice Marvin. In that case the action was on a joint and several promissory note made by Hinkle, Dash and Payne. Dash and Payne were sureties of Hinkle. The defense was a set-off of a judgment recovered upon contract by Hinkle against the plaintiffs for an amount equal or larger than the amount of the note, and it was held the defense was proper.

As was said in the case of American Guild v. Damon, 186 N. Y. 365; “ The plaintiff had but one claim, and but one cause of action,” and “ payment by anybody liable thereon, whether jointly or severally, would necessarily satisfy it.”

The defendants, therefore, have an equitable defense of which they should not be deprived, especially as their co-defendant is asserting it for its own benefit, and it necessarily enures as well to their own benefit.

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Related

Smith v. . Felton
43 N.Y. 419 (New York Court of Appeals, 1871)
American Guild v. . Damon
78 N.E. 1081 (New York Court of Appeals, 1906)
Bathgate v. . Haskin
59 N.Y. 533 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)
Parsons v. Nash
8 How. Pr. 454 (New York Supreme Court, 1853)
Brockway & McFarland v. Copp
2 Paige Ch. 578 (New York Court of Chancery, 1831)

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Bluebook (online)
77 Misc. 462, 137 N.Y.S. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iroquois-door-co-v-leavenworth-apartment-co-nysupct-1912.