Quintard v. Secor

1 Abb. Pr. 393, 3 E.D. Smith 614
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Abb. Pr. 393 (Quintard v. Secor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quintard v. Secor, 1 Abb. Pr. 393, 3 E.D. Smith 614 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

The plaintiffs herein allege in their complaint that they have rendered services and furnished materials, use of tools, machinery, &c., to the. defendants, which are reasonably worth the sum of $651.15, for which sum the defendants are indebted to them, with interest from the 28th day of September, 1854.

After the service of the summons and complaint, and before answering, the defendants served an offer to allow judgment to be entered in the plaintiff’s favor for the sum of $572.52, with interest from the 28th day of September, 1854, with costs.

The offer not being accepted, the defendants put in an answer admitting that the services were rendered, and the materials, use of tools, machinery, &c., were furnished, but denying that the services were reasonably worth the sum of $651.15, and on the other hand alleging that they were worth only the sum of $572.52, and that there is no other or greater sum due from the defendants to the plaintiffs than the said sum of $572.15, with interest thereon from the 28th day of September, 1854.

Upon the coming in of the answer, the plaintiffs have applied to the court, under § 244 of the Code of Procedure, for an order that the defendant “ satisfy that part of the plaintiff’s claim which he admits to be due, being the sum of $572.52, with interest from September 28,1854. This motion is opposed by the defendants upon three grounds:—■

1. That the case is not such an one as is contemplated by the section referred to.

[395]*3952. That the admission is not of that specific character which precludes inquiry, being only a concession that “not more than the sum named is due.” (Citing Dolan v. Petty, 4 Sandf. S. C. R., 673).

3. That where the defendant has made an offer to allow judgment to be taken for the sum sought, the court should not make an order for its payment. (Citing Smith v. Olssen, Ib. 711).

I. Under this first objection, it is insisted that the language of the Code, “ when the answer of the defendant admits part of the plaintiff’s claim to be just,” applies only to a case in which the complaint of the plaintiff proceeds upon more than one cause of action or more than one item of claim, one or more of which is admitted in the precise extent in which it is set up by the plaintiff. As for example, when the action is upon two notes or bonds, and one of them is admitted to be due and payable, or when the action is for certain specified goods, and the defendant admits the purchase oí certain of the goods at the very price claimed.

I cannot yield to this view of the construction of the statute. Its adoption necessarily results in excluding it from application to any case, in which the plaintiff’s cause of action, as set up, is single and entire; and nothing in its terms nor (in my judgment) in its spirit, warrants any such restriction. The terms “ part of the plaintiff's claim,” are at least equally well suited to a portion of one claim, as they are to one of two claims, and I think better, and had the legislature intended any such restriction, it would have been quite easy and much more explicit to say, “ when the answer admits any one or more items in the plaintiff’s claim or claims to be just,” &c.

This, however, is not the only ground of my opinion of the meaning of the legislature. By section 142 of the Code, the requisites of a complaint are given, and it must contain three things which are there defined with particularity. 1st. The title of the cause. 2d. The statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, and, 3d. A dema/nd of the relief to which the plaintiff supposes himself entitled, and if the recovery of money be demanded, the amount thereof shall be stated.

Now it is obvious that the first two of these requisites contain [396]*396no “ claim” whatever ; the third, and the third only, contains the plaintiff’s claim, and that alone declares the amount of money claimed. All else in the complaint is mere allegation of facts lying at the foundation of the plaintiff’s title to relief, but his claim is his demand of that relief. If then he demands a recovery of one hundred dollars, and the defendant admits that he is entitled to recover fifty dollars, he admits a part of his claim to be just” whether the facts stated, and out of which the plaintiff’s title to recover arises, consist of one note or two.

Again, I perceive no reason why such a discrimination should be made. If •■'.defendant admits that half the sum specified ■in one note is duS and payable, it.is no less just that he should pay that half, than that he should pay one of two notes when the plaintiff claims both. A legislature would exhibit a singular inconsistency in- making such a distinction. For example :—a defendant gives to one man a single note for $1000. To another he gives two notes for $500 each. Being sued by both, he admits that $500 and interest is due on the first note, and in the° other suit, he admits that one note and the interest thereon is due, and that only. Is there any reason or equity in furnishing this provisional remedy to one plaintiff, and witholding it from the other 1 I can find none.

We may properly assume that both parties are acting in good faith, each supposing that he is only insisting upon his legal rights; but conceding this, there is no reason that either should, retain in his hands money to which he admits that the other is entitled. The spirit and the scope, and in general the effect of the Code is to confine litigation to the real matters in dispute,—to bring parties before the court upon the mere merits of their controversies, and this provision is plainly a part of the scheme, and to me it seems a most just and equitable one.

As on the one hand the defendant has it in his power to tender the sum admitted to be due, or to offer to submit to judgment, and so put the plaintiff to his election to litigate further or not, at the peril of costs if he do not succeed; so when the defendant admits a sum to be due, the plaintiff is [397]*397permitted to require its payment, that the real matter of contest, and that only, may he before the court.

II. But it is urged that a concession that not more than a sum named is due,” is not an admission that a jpari of the plaintiff’s claim is just, and such appears to have been the opinion of the court in the case cited. (Dolan v. Petty, 4 Sandf., 673).

Without the sanction of such a decision, I should hardly have deemed this argument entitled to grave consideration. Suppose the case brought to trial, and the plaintiff rested his case upon the pleadings, would the court hesitate to order judgment for the plaintiff to the extent of the sum so named? Ray, more, would they permit' the defendant to call a single witness to prove that the plaintiff was entitled to less ?

Is it possible that when a defendant says, that $572.52 is due, and deny that the goods were<’-worth mortal he in legal effect does anything more than wh>¿n ]le gayg3 aver that the goods were worth only $572.52/ ana deny that any other or greater sum" is due.” ?

The rule of pleading, and the construction of pleadings have, it seems to me, undergone strange transformations, if these questions must not be answered in the negative.

The cases of Roberts v.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Abb. Pr. 393, 3 E.D. Smith 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quintard-v-secor-nyctcompl-1855.