Court Opinion

ID: 5507772
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 03:21:40.936293+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:33:53.900612
License: Public Domain

O’BRIEN, J.
The plaintiff brought an action for libel against the Courier Company, alleging, upon information and belief, that it was a domestic corporation, and the proprietor and publisher of a newspaper called the “Buffalo Courier.” The amended answer, while admitting that the Courier Company was such proprietor and publisher, denied that it is or ever was a domestic corporation; and this answer is verified by George Bleistein, who deposes that he is president of the Courier Company. Upon service of this answer, plaintiff, upon .an affidavit showing that he had inadvertently sued the defendant .as a domestic corporation, when in fact it is an unincorporated association doing business under the name of the Courier Company, and that there is no corporation by the name of the Courier Company, moved for leave to amend the sumyons and complaint by making the title of the defendant “George Bleistein, as president of the Courier Company,” and by changing the allegation that the defendant was a corporation to one that it was an unincorporated association.
There is no question made but that, if the defendant is an unincorporated association, the Code provides that it may be sued in the name of its president, or all its individual members may be sued, if known to the plaintiff. Code Civ. Proc. § 1919. The real question is as to whether the court had power to allow the amendment in the title. The judge at special term denied the motion for leave to amend upon the authority of the case of New York State Monitor Milk-Pan Ass’n v. Remington Agr. Works, 89 N. Y. 22, wherein it was held that the Code, section 723, does not authorize the striking out of the name of the sole defendant in an action, and the insertion in lieu thereof of the names of other persons as defendants; and the reasons given are that the effect of striking out the name of the defendant, and inserting the names of three other persons as defendants in lieu thereof, “is to continue the action against other and different parties than the one named, thus substituting a cause of action with new and other defendants.” In the opinion, the case of Bassett v. Fish, 75 N. Y. 303, is cited, wherein it was held that the complaint could not be amended by striking out the names of the defendants, who were sued as school trustees, and inserting the name of the corporate board of education to which they belonged. In both these cases it will be noticed that the persons sought to be brought in were different from those upon whom process had been served; and these decisions go to the extent of holding (and very properly) that, where one person or corporation is sued, another and different person, upon whom *739process has not been served, cannot be brought in as a sole defendant, by way of substitution. This is clearly pointed out in the dissenting opinion of the general term in New York State Milk-Pan Co. v. Remington’s Agr. Wks., 25 Hun, 479, which was the one receiving the approval of the court of appeals. Among the other cases therein collated and discussed, reference is made to Newton v. Manufacturing Co., 17 Abb. Pr. 318, note; Tighe v. Pope, 16 Hun, 180; and Bank v. Magee, 20 N. Y. 355. As therein said:
“Newton v. Manufacturing Co. is a special term case, briefly reported, where the plaintiff, in ignorance of the true name of defendants, and supposing them to be a corporation, which they were not, had sued them by the name in which they transacted their business. He was allowed, on motion, to substitute their names as defendants, under section 175 of the old Code of Civil Procedure. If the plaintiff in the present case had made the Remington Agricultural Company defendant, supposing it to be a corporation, this ease would have been like that cited. As it is, the analogy fails, because the plaintiff has not sued Philo Remington and his partners, but has sued an existing corporation, which is entirely distinct from them. In the case cited there was no corporation, but the name inserted in the summons as that of the defendant was the partnership name of the very persons whose real names were afterwards substituted. No new person was brought in. The real defendants had been sued under their partnership name. * * * The case of Tighe v. Pope was one where an action was brought against one, describing her as administratrix, and asking judgment against her as such. The motion was to strike out the words ‘as administratrix.’ The court held that it should be granted, remarking that, ‘whether the amendment were allowed or not, the same person will be defendant.’ ■* * * The case of Bank v. Magee was one where the plaintiff miscalled himself by the name ‘Bank of Havana,’ instead of using his true name, ‘Charles Cook.’ An amendment giving his true name brought in no new party. There was no person, natural or artificial, called ‘Bank of Havana,’ but that name was one used by Cook, the real plaintiff, in his business. Like the case last cited, therefore, the amendment-brought in no person who had not in fact been a party previously.”
In addition to the above, we have a special term decision of this court, of McKane v. General Committee, 21 Abb. N. C. 89, 1 N. Y. Supp. 580, where a voluntary, unincorporated association was sued in its own name, but the summons was served on its president; and an amendment to the title of the action was allowed, changing the defendant’s name to that,of its president, in order to comply with the Code of Civil Procedure, § 1919, allowing such an association to sue or be sued in the name of its president or treasurer. As therein said:
“The plaintiff endeavored to bring into court the voluntary association, against which he seeks to enforce some right. He has caused the proper officer of that association to be served with process, and has simply omitted to name that officer in the title of the action as president of the association.”
It is true that in the case last cited the plaintiff did not, as here, sue the defendant as a corporation; but in that, as in the other cases cited, the distinction between a case where an amendment will and where one will not be allowed is pointed out, viz. that where there is merely a misnomer, or some defect in the designation, and not a substitution or change of the party, the amendment will be allowed. The question, therefore, is whether there is here sought a change of the party defendant. The plaintiff is suing the proprietor and publisher of the Buffalo Courier, which is called the Courier Company, *740and does business under that name. This the defendant admits, denying merely that it is a corporation. The amendment desired is not to substitute an individual, but to change the name so as to conform to the statute. It is the Courier Company, publisher and proprietor of the Buffalo Courier, that will still be the defendant; but as it turns out that, instead of being a corporation, it is an unincorporated association, the title of the action must be changed. The amendment asked is precisely the same as if a person were sued as administrator of A., and it subsequently appearing that he was not such administrator, but was the administrator of B., an application should then be made to amend so as properly to designate the party defendant. That the court has the power to allow such an amendment, under section 723 of the Code, in furtherance of justice, has been many times held, and yet such an amendment is nothing more than the plaintiff here asks; that is, to bring in a party doing business under a name equally suited to either a corporation or an unincorporated association, and which he finds, upon the party appearing in court, has been incorrectly described or misnamed, but which he still wishes to retain in court, after amending the process and pleadings so as properly to designate the defendant. In other words, there is no change of party, the same individual being still before the court, but, having misnamed him, it is proposed to correct such misnomer, which we think the court, in a proper case, has the right to permit. The error into which the plaintiff fell was a natural one, and his failure properly to describe the defendant is satisfactorily explained. There being no denial of the merits, and no laches having been shown on the part of the plaintiff in moving,—it "having been denied by the court below solely upon the ground of want of power,—we think that the order should be reversed, with $10 costs and disbursements to appellant, and the motion for leave to amend granted upon payment by plaintiff of the costs of the action up to the date of the service by plaintiff of his notice of motion.
FOLLETT, J., concurs. VAN BRUNT, P. J., dissents.