Weston v. Citizens' National Bank of Corry

88 A.D. 330
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 88 A.D. 330 (Weston v. Citizens' National Bank of Corry) 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
Weston v. Citizens' National Bank of Corry, 88 A.D. 330 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

McLennan, P. J.:

The facts are not in dispute. The appellant is a national bank, having its place of business in Corry, Penn. For many years prior to January 5, 1892, Abijah Weston, On-in Weston and William W. Weston were extensively engaged in the lumber business as- copartners, under the firm name of Weston Brothers.” On the 6th day of December, 1891, William W. Weston assumed to make the promissory note of said firm for $3,179.27, payable to the order of one G-. E. Eamsey, and signed it “ Weston Brothers.” The note was indorsed by the payee, by S. S. Eamsey and by W. H. & D. C. Conklin, who were also copartners, and was transferred to the defendant bank in the regular course of business, before maturity. The note not having been paid, the defendant bank, in December, 1893, commenced an action in the Supreme Court against all the parties to it to enforce its collection. In that action all the defendants made default except Abijah Weston and Orrin Weston, who answered and alleged that the copartnership of Weston Brothers had been dissolved more than a year before the note was issued; that it was fraudulently issued by William W. Weston, and not in and about the business of the firm; that it was given without.con[332]*332sideration, and that the plaintiff had notice of all of said facts when it became the owner of the note. On 'December 29, 1893, and after the answer referred to had been served by Abijah and Orrin Weston, the attorneys for the defendant bank, the plaintiff in that action, upon the usual affidavit of default, obtained an order severing the action, and judgment was entered against the non-answering defendants, including said William W. Weston. On January 2, 1894, such judgment was docketed in Cattaraugus county, and an execution delivered to thé sheriff of said county, who, on the 9th day of January, 1894, returned the same nulla bona. On the fifteenth day of February following the attorney for the'defendant bank made an application to the court, in the action brought upon the note, to vacate and set aside said judgment as against the said William W. Weston, on the ground that it was entered by inadvertence or mistake. The court granted the order and the judgment as against William W. Weston was vacated and set aside, without notice to Abijah and Orrin Weston, the answering defendants in that action.

Six days before the order vacating the judgment entered against William W. Wéston was obtained, Abijah and Orrin Weston made a motion at Special Term for leave tó file and serve a- supplemental answer, setting up the entry of judgment against William W. Weston. Upon the hearing of' that motion affidavits were presented on behalf of the bank, tending to show that the judgment against William W. Weston was entered inadvertently and by mistake, and the order vacating said judgmént as against William W. Weston was also presented upon said motion. The answering defendants Abijah and Orrin Weston were then fully informed that such order had been made and of its contents. The motion for leave to serve a supplemental answer was denied. An appeal was taken from that order to the General Term, and it was in all things affirmed.

During the pendency of the appeal from the order refusing permission to serve a supplemental answer, or soon after the decision of the General Term, Orrin Weston died. The case was then brought to trial as against Abijah Weston; a verdict was rendered in his favor upon the issues raised by the original pleadings in the action, and judgment was entered accordingly. The defendant bank, the plaintiff in that, action, appealed from said judgment to [333]*333the Appellate Division, where it was in all things affirmed. (Citizens' National Bank v. Weston, 19 App. Div. 627.) An appeal was then taken to the Court of Appeals, where the judgment was reversed and a new trial granted (162 N. Y. 113). Abijah Weston died while the appeal was pending in the Court of Appeals, leaving a last will and testament, of which the plaintiff is executor, and an order was duly made substituting the plaintiff as defendant in place of Abijah Weston, deceased.

The defendant bank then undertook to prosecute to final judgment the action brought by it to enforce the collection of the note above referred to. This action was then brought and an injunction obtained restraining the defendant from taking any steps in the prosecution of that action during the pendency of this. The action was tried before the court without a jury in June, 1902, and final judgment rendered forever restraining and enjoining the defendant from prosecuting the action brought by it on the promissory note.

The affirmance of the judgment appealed from necessarily involves holding that by the order of the Special Term made in the action brought upon the promissory note in question, Abijah and Orriu Weston, the answering defendants in that action,. were improperly denied permission to set up, by supplemental answer, the fact that the plaintiff had éntered judgment'against William W. Weston, who, as alleged in the complaint, was jointly liable with such answering defendants, and was not liable in any other way ; that such order was improperly affirmed by the General Term, and that thereby Abijah and Orrin Weston were prevented from interposing a valid and legal defense, existing in their favor, to any claim which the plaintiff had against them on account of such note. Clearly the motion to serve a supplemental answer was properly denied, if the Special Term liad the power to make and was justified in making the order of February 15, 1894, which in terms vacated and set aside the judgment entered against William W. Weston. If no such judgment in fact existed at the time the motion for leave to set it up by supplemental answer was heard, the motion should not have been granted.

In the order vacating and setting aside the judgment entered against William W. Weston it was recited:

[334]*334“ * * * And it appearing that an order of severance in said action was made by the clerk of Erie County under section 456 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and that by mistake or inadvertence the name of the defendant William W. Weston was included in the said order, a judgment was thereby directed against him as well as the defendants Ramsey, W. H. and D. C. Conklin, and that such order as to the defendant William W. W eston was made without jurisdiction and improperly granted, as there was no several liability alleged in the complaint of said action as against the defendant William W. Weston. Now, on motion of Martin Clark, of counsel for said plaintiff,
“ It is ordered that said order of severance in said action, made on the 29th day of December, 1893, by the clerk of Erie County, be modified in so far as it permits judgment therein to be taken against the defendant William W. Weston, and that the judgment entered in said action pursuant to said order against William W. Weston, be vacated and set aside, in so far as it directs judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant William W. Weston; and the clerk of Erie County be and he is hereby authorized and directed, upon the entry of this order, to mark the docket or dockets in his office wherein said judgment appears against William W. Weston with proper reference to this order.”

Upon the appeal "from the order denying the motion for leave to serve a supplemental answer, the General Term said (Citizens' National Bank v. Weston,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A.D. 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weston-v-citizens-national-bank-of-corry-nyappdiv-1903.