Summary
determining Plaintiff-manufacturer's sole remedy was for breach of contract against the subcontractor and precluding equitable recovery against the owner or general contractor where they assumed none of the subcontractor's contractual obligations
Summary of this case from Morgan Stanley & Co. v. Peak Ridge Master SPC Ltd.Opinion
May 11, 1992
Appeal from the Supreme Court, Richmond County (Sangiorgio, J.).
Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
The court's denial of the defendant's motion to amend its answer was not an improvident exercise of discretion. After five years of discovery the defendant moved, about one week prior to the scheduled trial date, for leave to amend its answer to add additional affirmative defenses. However, the information upon which the affirmative defenses are based was known to the defendant for over five years. Therefore, since the defendant failed to offer an acceptable excuse for its delay in seeking the amendment, and since the plaintiff would be prejudiced by the addition of these new defense theories on the eve of trial, where the plaintiff had prepared his case in response to the original answer, the defendant's motion was properly denied (see, Balport Constr. Co. v. New York Tel. Co., 134 A.D.2d 309; Fulford v. Baker Perkins, Inc., 100 A.D.2d 861). Thompson, J.P., Bracken, Sullivan and Santucci, JJ., concur.