Court Opinion

ID: 5238231
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 17:19:12.146793+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:39.822790
License: Public Domain

Scott, J.:
The action is by a tenant against the owner of a tenement house for damages suffered in consequence, as it is alleged, of the negligence of defendant in permitting a stair carpet to become worn and dangerous.
The order sought to be vacated requires the examination of defendant, by four of its officers, as to all the issues in the action, and also calls for the production of certain papers and documents. This order is too broad and requires modification. The defendant, however, insists that it should be vacated absolutely. This contention is based mainly upon the erroneous supposition that this court had declared against any examination before trial in an action for damages for personal injuries. This is a mistake. No such general rule has ever been laid, down, nor could it be without ignoring the provisions of law providing for examination before trial in certain cases. The Code (§ 870 et seq.) makes no distinction between actions in tort and other actions, and we should have no right to establish an arbitrary rule upon the subject. What we have done is to say that under ordinary circumstances we would not permit a defendant to examine a plaintiff in an accident case *816before trial as to the circumstances of the accident or the alleged negligence of defendant. (Wood v. Hoffman Co., 121 App. Div. 636; Griffin v. Cunard Steamship Co., Ltd., 159 id. 453.) These decisions have proceeded upon the theory that an examination before trial would amount to nothing more than a cross-examination of plaintiff and an inquiry into his case. In so holding we have merely adhered to the rule we have tried to follow consistently that a party, plaintiff or defendant, can examine his adversary before trial only for the purpose of proving facts necessary to the examining party’s affirmative case or. defense, but not for the purpose of disproving facts which the adversary, must affirmatively prove in order to succeed. In other words, the testimony sought to be elicited must be necessary for the use of the party seeking to elicit it in establishing some fact which he must affirmatively prove. (Oakes v. Star Company, 119 App. Div. 358.) Tested by this rule the plaintiff is, I think, entitled to examine defendant for the purpose of showing, if she can, that it had notice of the defective condition of the stairway. Notice in such a case may be either direct or inferential, and it will be incumbent upon plaintiff to show not only the defect complained of, but also that defendant had notice thereof. To prove this she is entitled to examine defendant and to have produced any documents that may be in its possession showing actual notice. She is also entitled to show by defendant’s officers that defendant had control over all the hallways, lobbies and staircases of the tenement house in question, unless defendant shall stipulate, as it has once offered to do, that it had such control, in which case an examination upon this subject will be unnecessary. We can see no reason for the production of the leases and conveyances affecting the premises.
The order appealed from will, therefore, be so modified as to limit the order, for examination-before trial as above indicated; • and as so. modified affirmed, without costs to either party.
Ingraham, P. j., McLaughlin, Laughlinand Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Order modified as directed in • opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs. Order to be settled on notice.