Opinion
February Term, 1897.
Herbert C. Smyth, for the appellant.
James Kearney, for the respondent.
The District Court judgment was recovered and satisfied subsequent to the service of the answer in this action; and, unless some good legal reason was shown to the contrary, the motion should have been granted. As appears by the memorandum of the learned judge at Special Term, questions of laches and good faith were eliminated, and his denial was placed upon the case of Perry v. Dickerson ( 85 N.Y. 345) which he concluded was an authority against the validity of the defense sought to be interposed by the supplemental answer. In that case the plaintiff brought an action to recover damages for an alleged wrongful dismissal from defendant's employment before the expiration of a stipulated term. It was held that the judgment therein was not a bar to a subsequent action to recover wages earned during the time the plaintiff was actually employed, and due and payable before the wrongful dismissal; and that the two claims constituted separate and independent causes of action, upon which separate actions were maintainable. It was therein further held that, to sustain a plea of a former judgment in bar, it must appear that the cause of action in both suits was the same, or that some fact essential to the maintenance of the second suit was an issue in the first action.
This, however, is not a case where two causes of action spring out of the same contract, but is one in tort; and the defendant insists that, though the plaintiff may have separate causes of action for loss of property and for injuries to the person, yet, where both come from but one act of negligence, there can be but one suit to recover the whole damage. In support of this view, our attention is called to the case of Nathans v. Hope ( 77 N.Y. 420), wherein the rule is laid down in the following language: "The principle is well settled that an entire indivisible demand cannot be split up into several claims so as to make it a subject of two or more separate actions. * * * It follows as the result of this rule that where a claim arises upon a contract, or from a tort, the entire claim must be prosecuted in a single suit, and several suits cannot be brought for separate parts of such claim. Where several suits are brought, the pendency of the first may be pleaded in abatement of the other suit or suits, and a judgment in either will be a bar to a recovery in any other suit." (See, also, Secor v. Sturgis, 16 N.Y. 548.)
The distinction between the case of Perry v. Dickerson ( supra), relied upon by the learned judge below, and the facts appearing in the case at bar, is apparent; and enforced as this distinction is by the other cases to which reference has been made, it is manifest that the defense sought to be here interposed by way of supplemental answer is by no means a frivolous one, but is such as should be passed upon in the usual and orderly way upon a trial. Without, therefore, expressing any view upon the merits of such defense, we think, under the decisions, where neither laches nor want of good faith, nor the frivolousness of a pleading can be urged against the granting of the relief, it was error not to accord to the defendant the right to serve the proposed supplemental answer and thus afford him an opportunity to present the merits of the defense upon the trial.
The order is accordingly reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion granted, with ten dollars costs to abide the event.
VAN BRUNT, P.J., BARRETT, RUMSEY and INGRAHAM, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs to abide the event.