Seibert v. Dunn

70 Misc. 422, 126 N.Y.S. 974
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 70 Misc. 422 (Seibert v. Dunn) 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
Seibert v. Dunn, 70 Misc. 422, 126 N.Y.S. 974 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Crane, J.

The plaintiff is an assignee of the amount due the Eastern Paving Brick Company upon a contract [423]*423with the defendant, Bart Dunn, for brick delivered thereunder; and the principal question which has arisen is whether the defendant can defend or counterclaim because of the damages he has sustained through a subsequent breach of the contract by the assignor.

The facts are as follows: On July 11, 1900, the Eastern Paving Brick 'Company, by written contract, agreed to furnish the defendant all the vitrified brick required by him in the performance of the work under his contract with the city of ¡New York for sewers and appurtenances in Broadway. The contract price was thirteen dollars and fifty cents per thousand, to be paid by the advance of freight and unloading charges and cash on the fifteenth of each month amounting to ninety per cent, of the monthly estimate or certificate of the city engineer showing the quantity of brick laid during the preceding month; the remaining ten per cent, to be paid in cash thirty days after the last shipment of vitrified brick required under the contract.

During 1900, the Eastern Paving Brick Company shipped to the' defendant 559,000 brick, all of which, except as hereafter stated,"were used by the defendant in the Broadway sewer. The amount to be paid for these brick under the contract would have been $7,546.50, on account of which Dunn paid, thereafter, $2,500’ and advanced freight charges of $1,224.20, leaving a balance due of $3,822.30, less the deductions hereinafter mentioned.

These brick were not all used in the year of -delivery, so that the instalments duo under the contract pursuant to the engineer’s certificates did not mature until after May 1,1902, but were all due ait the time this action was brought.

Prior to the maturity of these instalment payments, -and on June 20, 1901, the Eastern Paving Brick Company assigned its -claim against the defendant for the brick furnished under this contract to a Mr. Eells who thereafter assigned it to the plaintiff; which -assignments, so far -as this case is concerned, appear to have been in good faith and for value.

In May, 1902, the Eastern Paving Brick Company went into the hands of a receiver and thereafter defaulted in its [424]*424contract by failing to deliver the additional brick required by Bart D'unn; and it is conceded that his damage in being compelled to purchase thereafter the requisite brick in the market amounted to more than the sum due for the brick delivered, or the plaintiff’s claim sued on in this action.

On June 2b, 1901, when the Eastern Paving Brick Company assigned its unmatured claim .against Bart Dunn to Mr. Eells, the defendant had no existing claim or demand or cause of action against the brick company, as its breach of contract did not occur until a year thereafter, or in May of 190'2, at which time he did have a claim against it for damage, as above stated, equal in amount to the assignee’s claim against him.

The question is, Can the defendant set off or counterclaim his damages for this breach of contract against the assignee of the amount due the Eastern Paving Brick Company for the brick previously delivered, or can he use these facts as a defense ?

■Such a claim would have been a defense at common law in an action brought by the assignor— a defense in the nature of a recoupment as distinguished from a set-off. Recoupment at common law was a defense which, if successful, reduced the plaintiff’s demand to the extent of the amount recouped. It was not pleaded as is our present counterclaim, nor considered as a set-off, but rather as a defense in the nature of payment. Waterman Set-Off, § 416, and all of chap. X.

Under our present Code system of pleading, however, recoupment, set-off and demands in the nature of.counterclaims allowed by statute are all treated alike and cannot be pleaded or proved as defenses, but must be pleaded and tried as counterclaims pursuant to the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure. This was decided as late as 1909 in Deeves & Son v. Manhattan Life Insurance Co., 195 N. Y. 324, the opinion stating: “ When a defendant has an election to set up a cross claim of any kind to diminish or overcome the claim of the plaintiff, or to bring an independent action thereon, it necessarily follows that such claim, if asserted, must be set up as a counterclaim in the action, whether it constitutes [425]*425what was formerly denominated a recoupment, or it is any other claim coming within the Code definition of a counterclaim. The right to recoup, which is asserted in cases of this kind, means simply the right to plead a counterclaim under the Code.”

The claim of the defendant against the brick company for breach of contract must, therefore, be treated as a counterclaim to be set forth and tried as such. Can the defendant counterclaim his damage against the brick company’s assignee ?

Sections 501 and 502 of the Code of Civil Procedure, defining counterclaims, provide that, as against the assignee of the contract sued upon, the demand to be counterclaimed must have existed against the assignor at the time of the assignment.

The defendant’s counsel in this case insists that equity is not bound by these Code provisions and will permit a set-off even where the facts do not bring the case within them; and he is justified in making this assertion by statements in some of the cases, viz., Smith v. Felton, 43 N. Y. 419; Rothschild v. Mack, 42 Hun, 72; affd., 115 N. Y. 1; Hughitt v. Hayes, 136 id. 163; Richards v. LaTourette, 119 id. 54. But these cases go no further than to hold that in equity mere formalities or technicalities may be brushed aside and a claim against the assignor be considered as due at the time of the assignment which at law might not be actually due by reason of some omitted technicality or demand. I can find no case which has changed the rule that a demand to be set off against an assignee must have been in existence against the assignor at the time of the assignment. In the Smith case, the court considered a note due which drew no interest; in the Hughitt case equity considered the demand for a deed as having been made at the time of the assignment; while' the case of Rothschild v. Mack was explained in Fera v. Wickham, 135 N. Y. 223, upon the theory that it was a cause of action for fraud which must have existed at the time of the assignment; in the Richards v. LaTourette case, the court decided that the party seeking to counterclaim had the right to waive his time [426]*426of payment and to consider his debt as due the assignor ft the time of the assignment.

The rule appears, therefore, to be firmly established that both law and equity follow the Code provisions of counterclaim and that a demand to be counterclaimed against an assignee must have been in existence against the assignor at the time of the assignment of the contract. The circumstance that the claim assigned has not yet matured, or that it does not become payable until after the debtor’s claim against the assignor has arisen or matured, does not change or modify this rule. Fera v. Wickham, 135 N. Y. 223; Raymond v. Hogan, 10 App. Div. 189; Myers v. Davis, 22 N. Y. 489; Martin v. Kunzmuller, 37 id. 396; Watt v. City of New York, 1 Sandf. 23; Lucas v. East Strousberg Glass Co., 38 Hun, 581; Mead v. Gillett, 19 Wend. 396 ; Willover v. First National Bank, 40 Hun, 184.

Patton v. Royal Baking Powder Co., 114 N. Y. 1, and Zabriskie v. Central Vermont R. R. Co., 131 id.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Misc. 422, 126 N.Y.S. 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seibert-v-dunn-nysupct-1911.