Court Opinion

ID: 5255984
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 18:28:04.45463+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:28:00.609243
License: Public Domain

Lyon, J.:
This is an action at law brought to recover the balance, $3,122.46, alleged to be due upon the installation of a heating *31plant in a building owned by the defendant at Cooperstown, N. Y., and for extra work. On July 19, 1909, the Otis & Sons Engineering Company executed the following instrument, which on July 23, 1909, was duly accepted by the Arthur H. Crist Company:
“ Gentlemen.— You will please pay to the First National Bank of Cooperstown, N. Y., all money that is due or may become due us for the installation of the steam heating apparatus and sanitary fixtures in your new building, and all sums that may become due for materials furnished or labor performed in or about the building.
“ Respectfully,
“ OTIS & SONS ENGINEERING CO.,
“ By J. S. Otis, Pres.
“Accepted: The Arthur H. Crist Co.,
“ By Arthur H. Crist, Pres.
■“ July 23, 1909.”
This action was commenced in December, 1912. The original plaintiff, the Otis & Sons Engineering Company, set forth two causes of action, one on contract, and one of quantum meruit. The defendant, after putting in issue the material allegations of the complaint, alleged payment and pleaded a counterclaim alleging that the plaintiff failed to furnish a heating plant which would develop the proper degree of heat, and thereby the defendant suffered damage in the sum of $5,600. In April, 1913, issue was joined by the service of a reply. The Otis & Sons Engineering Company having become bankrupt, its trustee above named was substituted as plaintiff. On July 31, 1916, the trustee sold the cause of action set forth in the complaint, and the claim upon which the same was founded, to George E. Hipp, who sold and assigned the same to the First National Bank of Cooperstown.
The action was upon the calendar for the Trial Term commencing February 25, 1918, and when reached the defendant moved for a dismissal of the complaint, which motion was granted with leave to the plaintiff to move at the term to be held April eighth to reopen the judgment. At that term the plaintiff and the First National Bank of Cooperstown, N. Y., *32applied to the court for an order opening the judgment, substituting the First National Bank of Cooperstown, N. Y., as sole plaintiff and permitting it to appear and plead, and for leave to file an amended supplemental complaint. The moving papers set out the assignment and allege that the notes secured by it were for $3,000, whereas the judgment demanded in the amended complaint was for $3,122.46, and that the assignment being in the nature of a pledge, the Otis & Sons Engineering Company had an equity in the cause of action alleged in the complaint. Leave to reopen the judgment, to substitute the bank, and to serve the amended supplemental complaint having been denied by the Trial Term, this appeal was taken.
The assignment and acceptance of July, 1909, were not set forth in either of the original pleadings, but are set out in the appellant’s moving papers upon this application. The order accepted July 23, 1909, directed the payment of all money due or to become due upon the contract, and all sums that may become due for materials furnished or labor performed in or about the building. The effect of giving it was to substitute the bank as the recipient of the payments. From the time of its acceptance the defendant was bound to pay all the money to the bank. (Weniger v. Fourteenth Street Store, 191 N. Y. 423, 427; Whiting v. Glass, 217 id. 333, 335.)
The motion would have been proper had the action been in equity, but it was in law; There was also the question of laches which may have influenced the court in denying the motion. In none of the cases cited by appellant did it appear that the defendant had been notified of the assignment and had accepted the assignee as the one to whom the money should be paid. The acceptance of the order discharged the defendant from all liability due or to become due the Otis & Sons Engineering Company for the work and materials therein specified and rendered it liable to the bank. At the time of the commencement of the action the sole right to demand and receive the moneys due and to become due upon the contract was vested in the bank, and the assignment of the trustee in bankruptcy of the bankrupt’s alleged cause of action therefor, transferred no interest within the meaning of section 756 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Neither was the court authorized by section 723 of the Code of Civil Procedure to strike out the name of the *33trustee in bankruptcy as sole plaintiff and substitute the bank in place thereof, for the effect would be to terminate the original action and bring a new one. (Gittleman v. Feltman, 191 N. Y. 205, 208.)
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
All concur, Cochrane, J., in result, except John M. Kellogg, P. J., dissenting, with a memorandum.