Court Opinion

ID: 5230669
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:55:34.626185+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:39.627009
License: Public Domain

Hotchkiss, J.:
I think the result the learned presiding justice has reached overlooks the language and intent of subdivision 4 of section *479549 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which reads: “ In an action upon contract, express or implied, * * * where it is alleged in the complaint that the defendant was guilty of a fraud in contracting or incurring the liability.” It seems to me that the “liability” thus referred to is that flowing from a breach of the contract on which the action is based, and is not a liability for deceit in inducing the contract. The situation is somewhat anomalous, but as shown by the notes to section 549 (Bliss New York Anno. Code [Gth ed.], § 549), the so-called Throop Code, enacted in 1876 (Laws of 1876, chap. 448), separated the cases where the right to arrest depended exclusively on the nature of the action from those where such right depended on extrinsic facts, placing the former in section 549 and the latter in section 550, and expressly provided in cases of the latter class for excluding allegations of such extrinsic facts from the complaint. (See Laws of 1877, chap. 416, § 1, subds. 101, 102, for amendments.) In 1879 (Laws of 1879, chap. 542) section 549 was amended by requiring the allegations of fraud to be inserted in the complaint in all actions of the class described in subdivision 4. (See, also, Laws of 1886, chap. 672.) The reason for this change is not difficult to understand. It arose from the abuse of orders of arrest which were secured and upheld on affidavits merely; the amendment gave the defendant the benefit of a jury trial on what was usually the question of greatest practical importance in such cases, namely, whether a body execution should or should not issue; and, in order to protect the plaintiff in the ultimate recovery of his debt, it was further provided by the same subdivision that “ a judgment for the defendant is not a bar to a new action to recover upon the contract only.”
In the light of the foregoing, I do not see how it is possible for one to have his action “ upon contract,” if in order to hold the defendant “ guilty of a fraud in contracting or incurring the liability,” he must rescind the contract and bring his action for damages.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke and Dowling, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., and Scott, J., dissented.