Court Opinion

ID: 5223486
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:39:24.989351+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:33.164524
License: Public Domain

Spring, J.:
The action was commenced in Justice’s Court against the defendant, John Fox, Jr., an infant, on a written agreement whereby he subscribed for a scholarship, and was to receive instruction in bookkeeping and business forms of the plaintiff, and was to pay therefor sixty dollars and eighty cents, in monthly installments of three dollars each after the first cash payment which was made, the complaint alleging that there was due and unpaid on said agreement the sum of forty dollars and eighty cents.
There was also set out in the complaint a cause of action against the defendant John Fox, Sr., on a collateral contract, guaranteeing “ the payment of said scholarship in accordance with the terms of said contract ” with the son.
Separate answers were interposed, each containing certain denials alleging other defenses, and the answer of the defendant’s son contains this averment: “The defendant further answering the complaint herein alleges that there is a misjoinder of parties defendant herein. That the said defendants cannot be joined in this cause of action as party defendants; that it is improper to join them as such.”
The answer of the codefendant, among other matters, alleges “that there is a misjoinder of parties defendants.”
At the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the contract with the independent agreement of guaranty of Fox, Sr., indorsed thereon. Objection was interposed, setting forth among other grounds: “ That part of it purports to be a direct contract with John Fox, Jr., and the other portion on another leaf is a guarantee with John Fox, father, and that this action can’t be maintained jointly against these parties. On the ground that it is incompetent and can’t be received in the condition the action is now in. That there is a misjoinder of parties defendant. That this alleged paper contains two contracts, one direct with one of the defendants and the other collateral with the other one. That it is not proper.”
The objection was sustained, the justice remarking: “ I don’t think it would be competent as against both of the defendants.” The plaintiff then rested and the defendant moved for a nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff had not made a *371case, “that there is an improper joinder of the defendants. That the action cannot be maintained against both defendants in one action, because one is a contract of guarantee and the other is a principal to a contract, and on the ground that the defendant is an infant under the age of twenty-one years,” and the motion was granted.
We start with the basic proposition that the two several causes of action were improperly united. (Roehr v. Liebmann, 9 App. Div. 247; Barton v. Speis, 5 Hun, 60; Brewster v. Silence, 8 N. Y. 207; Green v. Dunlop, 136 App. Div. 116, 120; Gould v. Moring, 28 Barb. 444.)
Each cause of action was stated with sufficient explicitness and the facts alleged in the separate averments were sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendant to whom they were directed, so that the defendants could not properly attack the misjoinder of causes of action by demurrer, although appearing on the face of the complaint. (Code Civ. Proc. § 2939; Gerould v. Cronk, 85 Hun, 500; Lapham v. Rice, 63 Barb. 485, 498.)
The Code of Civil Procedure does not prescribe the remedy available to the defendant in a Justice’s Court for a misjoinder of causes of action, and it was early held that he was not required to assert it by answer but should raise the question at the opening of the trial. (3 Waite Law & Pr. [5th ed.] 274; Gerould v. Cronk, supra.)
That rule has recently been criticized, and in a case of nonjoinder of parties defendant it was held that the defect should be raised in the answer by plea in abatement. (Amsterdam El. Light Co. v. Rayher, 43 App. Div. 602, 604.)
I think the defect was sufficiently pointed out in the answer. Much liberality is permitted in pleading, and in the practice generally, in Justice’s Court. The pleadings are frequently oral; when in writing are often prepared by the justice or a person not learned in the law or familiar with the technical rules of pleading. The purpose of the pleading is to state the facts which will apprise the adverse party of the cause of action or particular defense to be averred. The complaint had clearly alleged two several causes of action and the answer charged that there was a misjoinder of the defendants. It did not stop *372with 'that specific averment. It further stated that they cannot be joined, in this cause of action as defendants, and that joining them as such was improper. In view of the misjoinder in the complaint the plaintiff must have realized that it had erroneously united two causes of action, and the defendants were objecting to this defect in the complaint.
The contract was offered in evidence, including that of the guaranty. The objections interposed definitely informed the plaintiff of the position of the defendants. How the contract and the collateral agreement may have been competent against Fox, Sr. It was not offered against him alone. The remark of the court that it was not “ competent as against both of the defendants ” was an intimation to the plaintiff that it might discontinue as to one defendant. The suggestion was not adopted and the plaintiff promptly rested. Upon a motion for nonsuit the vice in the complaint was again succinctly stated, and the plaintiff’s counsel, it seems to me, should then have offered to discontinue as to one defendant. He preferred, however, to rely upon a technicality, although he had improperly united two independent causes of action. A discontinuance as to one defendant meant very small, if any, costs against the plaintiff, and the action could then have been tried upon the merits. I think the courts should not uphold attempts to gain advantage and pile up costs by technical practice, such as the plaintiff seemed to be inclined to adopt.
The judgment of the County Court should be reversed and that of the Justice’s Court affirmed, with costs to the appellant in this court and the courts below.
All concurred, except McLennan, P. J., who dissented in a memorandum, and Kruse, J., who dissented upon the ground that the principal contract and the guaranty were improperly excluded.