Court Opinion

ID: 6150682
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 15:50:54.345765+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:41.443535
License: Public Domain

Finelite, J.
Motion by defendants to stay all proceedings by the plaintiff in an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendant Eight in Municipal Court of the city of Mew York, borough of Manhattan, Fifth District. It seems that an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien, presumably against property owned by defendant Eight, was instituted in this court by plaintiff. Issue was joined in August or September, 1908. Subsequently, proceedings were had under the statute which resulted in an order being made fixing the amount of a bond to discharge said lien. The bond was given by the National Surety Company and the lien discharged, and a supplemental answer setting up these facts was interposed. The action now proceeds against Eight and the national Surety Company. It seems that the action in the Municipal Court was commenced on or about November 10, 1908, but service of the summons could not be made upon the defendant Eight until March 2, 1909. The action in the Municipal Court can be tried, as plaintiff asserts, within the course of a few weeks. Whether a stay should be granted rests in discretion. If all the parties in the Municipal Court action are in this action, and if the issues and pleadings in the Municipal Court action are the same as in this, it would be quite proper that the whole controversy should be determined in this action, which was first instituted, and unnecessary expense and litigation curtailed by the prosecution of the other suit. But the Municipal Court action is against the defendant Eight only and the action in this court is against Eight and the FT a*60tional Surety Company, although the action in this court is founded upon the same debt which is the basis of the action in the Municipal Court; yet the action in this court proceeds against the bond and is in the nature of an action in rem, and before that can be recovered upon all matters set forth in the mechanic’s lien must be proven, and that being the fact the surety company would he entitled to interpose any defense in the action in this court it saw fit. Under the circumstances it cannot he said that both actions and the persons made parties defendant are alike and this court could stay, as the attorney for the defendant says in his brief, the Municipal Court action “in the interest of justice and for the reason all the issues could be tried and disposed of in the City Court action.” The action in the Municipal Court can he reached and tried in a few weeks from now, and, as there can he no doubt of the fact that the plaintiff can pursue his remedy for the collection of the debt and the enforcement of his lien at the same time by different actions (Power v. Onward Const. Co., 39 Misc. Rep. 708), the court believes that the plaintiff should he permitted to try his case in the forum he last selected, and, if there judgment should be obtained and paid, it would he a bar to a recovery here. Defendant’s attorney contends in his brief that section 1628 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is made applicable to actions for foreclosure of liens by section 3401 of the Code, has been violated by plaintiff in the institution of the Municipal Court action, without leave of the court, etc. The section is as follows: “ Section 1628. While an action to foreclose a mortgage upon real property is pending or after final judgment for the plaintiff therein, no other action shall be commenced or maintained, to recover any part of the mortgage debt, without leave of the court in which the former action was brought.” The statute was passed to prevent vexatious and oppressive litigation, but it can hardly be said that the institution of the action in the Municipal Court for work, labor and services, and not founded upon the statute, as is the lien case in this court, is oppressive; rather, upon the facts in this case, the court believes that, as a speedy determination can be had in the tribunal last selected by the *61plaintiff, he should be permitted to proceed to a trial therein instead of awaiting the hazard and delay in reaching the action here. However, the court believes there is ample authority vested in it to give permission or leave to the plaintiff to maintain his action in the Municipal Court. The section reads ‘ no other action shall be commenced or maintained * * * without leave of the court in which the former action was brought.” The^ permission of the court simply removes an obstruction against an enforcement by suit. And it has been held, if the action has been commenced without previous authority, the fact may be pleaded and the plea would be in the nature of a plea in abatement to the action. If the plaintiff is defeated upon this ground, he may afterward apply to the court for leave to sue, and if granted he may commence a new action for the same cause. McKernan v. Robinson, 84 N. Y. 105. As the plaintiff had already commenced his action in the Municipal Court without leave, there seems to be no valid reason “ why the court, instead of putting the plaintiff to the necessity of discontinuing, may not, in a proper case, manifest its consent to the prosecution of the action, by a retroactive order, to take effect as of a time anterior to its commencement. The defendant is thereby deprived of no substantial defense. The court, in granting the order, may impose such terms as shall be just.” McKernan v. Robinson, supra. By permitting onward steps to be taken in the Municipal Court action in order to bring it to a speedy determination which will end all the litigation between the parties is, to the court’s mind, doing substantial justice.
Motion denied.