Case Name: George C. De Lacy, Appellant, v. William F. Kelly and Others, Respondents
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1911-11-10
Citations: 147 A.D. 37
Docket Number: 
Parties: George C. De Lacy, Appellant, v. William F. Kelly and Others, Respondents.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 147
Pages: 37–39

Head Matter:
George C. De Lacy, Appellant, v. William F. Kelly and Others, Respondents.
Second Department,
November 10, 1911.
Practice — motion and order — dismissal of complaint for failure to prosecute — renewing motion without leave — evidence — judicial notice — affidavits.
A motion once denied at (Special Term may not be renewed on the same papers, nor on additional proof of facts existing at the time the original motion was made without leave of court.
Where, however, the new motion is made on facts which have occurred since the making of the former motion no leave to renew is necessary, and the new motion may be made as a matter of right.
The Supreme Court will take judicial notice of its own terms for trials. Affidavits on a motion to dismiss a complaint for failure to prosecute, made a month after the denial of a similar motion, examined, and held, insufficient to justify an order dismissing the complaint.
Plaintiff’s failure to prosecute the action at terms of court held before the ■ first motion was made was covered by the denial of that motion.
Appeal by the plaintiff, George 0. De Lacy, from, an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Nassau Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Nassau on the 22d day of June, 19Í1, dismissing the complaint and vacating a lis pendens for a failure to prosecute the action.
Harry C. Kayser, for the appellant.
Oliver R. Brant, for the respondents.

Opinion:
Carr, J.:
This action was brought in Nassau county to compel the specific performance of a contract for the conveyance of real property. Qn Hay 25,1911, an order was made at Special Term in said county dismissing the action for failure on the part of. the plaintiff to prosecute the same with due diligence. From that order the plaintiff, appeals. .This order was; based upon a notice of motion dated February 24,1911, and on an affidavit of the attorney for the defendant Langevin, dated February 25, 1911. The motion was made returnable on March 6,1911. In the moving affidavit it is set forth that the action could have been brought on for trial by the plaintiff at the May term, and at the December term, in 1910, and that younger issues were reached and tried in regular order at each of said terms. In opposition to this motion the plaintiff submitted affidavits tending to excuse the delay in prosecution of the action, and setting up as an additional ground for the denial of the motion that the defendant Langevin had made a similar motion at Special Term in January, 1911, and that an order had been entered thereon in February, 1911, denying said former motion, and that the new motion-was made without obtaining leave to renew, and was not made on facts occurring since the making of the former motion, and was, therefore, an attempt to review, at one Special Term, an order made previously at another Special Term. While a motion once denied at Special Term may not be renewed'on the same papers nor on additional proof of facts existing at the time the original motion was made, without obtaining leave of court, yet where the new motion is made on facts which have occurred since the making of the former motion, no leave to renew is necessary, and the new motion may be made as a matter- of right. (Haskell v. Moran, 117 App. Div. 251, 252, and cases cited.) The order appealed from was granted on that theory, for it recites expressly as follows: "And it appearing to- my satisfaction that a new term of the court has transpired since the making of the motion before Mr. Justice Marean, above mentioned, and that the plaintiff has unreasonably neglected to proceed in the action, it is for the reason stated and no other, on motion, Ordered that the. motion to dismiss the complaint herein for want of prosecution be and the same hereby is granted."
The motion so granted, being based upon a notice -dated February twenty-fourth, and an affidavit verified February 25, 1911, must be deemed to have been decided on the motion papers, there being no additional papers submitted. The defendant's moving papers did not show that there had been any new term of court since the making of the former motion. There had been, however, a new term of court in February, at which the action might have been brought on for trial, and the court was justified in taking judicial cognizance-of its own terms for trials. The moving papers, however, do not show sufficiently that the plaintiff neglected unreasonably to proceed to trial at the February, term, or that issue had been joined as to all the parties defendant who had appeared in the action. The failure to prosecute at the preceding terms was covered by the order denying the original motion. The motion papers on which the new motion was made were not sufficient to justify the order appealed from.
The order is reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to prosecute is denied, with ten dollars costs.
Jenks, P. J., Burr, Woodward and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion-denied, with ten dollars costs.