Knowles v. City of New York

37 Misc. 195, 75 N.Y.S. 189
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 37 Misc. 195 (Knowles v. City of New York) 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
Knowles v. City of New York, 37 Misc. 195, 75 N.Y.S. 189 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.:

Of the thirty six typewritten pages which this complaint and answer fill, at least two thirds is tiresome verbiage. That the object of pleadings is to enable the court to perceive readily what the issues are seems to be quite set at naught by some of our learned profession in the county of Hew York. It is not saying too much to say that every trial judge in this part of the state has pleadings put before him every day which serve only to perplex and retard the trial, a tedious perusal of them being necessary in order, if possible, to derive any understanding of the issues from them.

[197]*197This complaint even sets out statutes in extenso, as though it were not enough that they are printed in the statute hooks. The answer is an intolerable bore. It denies the allegations contained in the subdivisions of the complaint numbered “ first ”, eleventh ”, “ fourteenth ”, “ seventeenth ”, “ eighteenth ” and “ nineteenth ”; the other subdivisions not being susceptible of and some of them not worth a denial. Instead of the denial being in scientific form (Code Civ. Pro. sec. 500), that “the defendants deny each and every allegation in the subdivisions of the complaint numbered first, eleventh, fourteenth, seventeenth, eightteenth and nineteenth contained ” (or that “ the defendants deny that they have any knowledge or information thereof sufficient to form a belief”) “ excepting ”, etc. (making a brief reference to the things excepted from the denial), which would show in a few lines and at a glance what was put in issue, this answer by six separate subdivisions separately denies either all of the allegations, or else those contained in the principal part of each of the said subdivisions of the complaint. But the pleader was not even content with all this useless verbiage; one after another, ex industria, he put each denial in the following form (to quote one as a sample) : “ Answering the allegations contained in the paragraph of the complaint numbered nineteenth, these defendants deny each and every of said allegations. Said paragraph reads as follows: ” and then it is copied in haec verba in full. In this way the pleader, as though he were being paid by the page, and no doubt to his great satisfaction, used six pages for what could he expressed in. six lines.

Then comes a so-called “ defence ”, or what the pleader calls an “ affirmative defence ” (as though there were such a phrase, or he thought there is such a thing as a “ negative defence ”, in the nomenclature and terminology of pleading), which takes up nine pages more, and the demurrer to which for insufficiency brings these pleadings before the court for review. It is a mere rigmarole.' But I am spared the labor of searching through it to see if hidden anywhere in it there may be some accidental or stray fact alleged which would be a “ defence ” to the action, assuming the complaint to be true in all of its allegations (that being in every case the test of the sufficiency of a “ defence ”, Staten Island M. R. R. Co. v. Hincheliffe, 34 Misc. Rep. 49); for I do not think the com[198]*198plaint states a cause of action, and a bad answer is good enough for a. bad complaint (Went v. City of New York, 36 Misc. Rep. 496).

The action is by a taxpayer to annul a contract for work and material made by the defendant commissioners who have in charge by statute the building of a bridge over the East river for the city, with the defendant corporation the Pennsylvania Steel Company, and to require the money already paid thereon to be refunded to the city.

The complaint is based, first, on allegations of fraud by the said officials in the making of the contract, and resulting in waste of the funds of the city, and, second, on allegations that the making of the contract was, in other alleged particulars and irrespective of fraud, an illegal official act; following the plain words of the statute, and also the decisions, which make either of the said grounds suffice to enable a taxpayer to maintain such a suit (L. 1892 ch. 301; Ziegler v. Chapin, 126 N. Y. 342; Peck v. Belknap, 130 N. Y. 394) ; although, strangely enough, there seems to be a recent minor decision that an allegation of illegal official action does not suffice unless followed by an allegation that such action will cause waste (Melody v. Goodrich, 67 App. Div. 368).

1 — The alleged ground of fraud will be first considered. The contract for the doing of the work and the furnishing of materials (among which was a large quantity of steel) had by the city charter to be let upon advertisement to the lowest bidder (sec. 519, charter of 1897) ; and the complaint alleges that “ the said contract and specifications and the said advertisement for bids and proposals for the doing of said work were fraudulently prepared and issued.” Of course this general allegation goes for naught. It is a rule of pleading so well known among us that citation of authority for it has long ceased to be necessary, that nothing short of an allegation of facts constituting fraud will-suffice to tender an issue of fraud. We must therefore look to the specific allegations and see if a charge of fraud can be based upon them.

They are two, viz., that the proposals and advertisement for bids for the contract contained requirements (1) “ that bids would be received only from parties having the requisite plant and facilities which had been in successful operation on work of similar character for at least one year,” and (2) “that the finished steel [199]*199should not contain to exceed .06 of on» per cent, of phosphorus, .04 of one per cent, of sulphur, .80 of one per cent, of manganese, and .35 of one per cent, of silicon.”

Then follows an allegation that the said requirements “ were unreasonable and unfair, and were fraudulently prepared and issued with the purpose and intent of limiting competition and confining the same to a small class of bidders, and did limit competition and confine the same to a small class of bidders, thereby increasing the cost of the work as by said requirements, although competent and reliable bidders with the requisite plant and facilities desired to submit bids and proposals for the doing of said work, they were prevented from so doing unless their plant and facilities had been in successful operation on work of a similar character for at least one year; that the requirement in the specification as to the elements of finished steel tended to and actually did, increase the price of the work because it prohibited the furnishing of steel by any other company than the Carbon Steel Company, whose steel alone meets the requirements and conditions of said specifications, although steel manufactured by other companies than said Carbon Steel Company is equally good and well adapted for the purposes of said proposed work.”

There is no allegation that the defendant commissioners knew that only the Carbon Steel Company manufactured steel which met their requirements in respect of quality and ingredients, or that other companies manufactured a steel which though different was just as good and well adapted; and therefore the complaint states no fact upon which a fraudulent intent can be founded in that respect. But, beyond this, as will be seen later, they even had the right to call for material made by only one manufacturer.

The allegation that such requirements

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77 A.D. 307 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
37 Misc. 195, 75 N.Y.S. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knowles-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1902.