
    Stryker vs. The New York Exchange Bank.
    After the defendant has answered, the plaintiff may amend his complaint, of course and without costs, hy stating the place of trial to be in a different county from that specified in the complaint originally served.
    THE plaintiff commenced his action by a summons, containing a notice that the complaint would be filed in the county of New York. The defendant having appeared, the plaintiff served the defendant with a complaint, stating the place of trial to be in the county of New York. The defendant having answered, the plaintiff served an amended complaint, stating the place of trial to be in the county of Oneida. The defendant now moved to set aside the amended complaint for irregularity.
    
      A. S. Van Duzer,
    
    for the motion, insisted that the place of trial was fixed by the summons and complaint; and could not be changed except on motion. (Bangs v. Selden, 13 How. 163.) The code, § 126, expressly provides how the place of trial shall be changed, viz. “by order of the court.” A plaintiff has no more right to change the place of trial by merely amending his complaint than the court would have power at any stage of the cause to change it on a motion to amend, instead of a motion under section 126. Section 172
    
      has always been regarded with some qualifications and restrictions. (3 Code Rep. 189. 6 How. 321. 1 Code Rep. [N. S] 318.)
    
      Charles Tracy, contra.
    The statement of the place of trial is part of the complaint, (Code, § 142,) and therefore is amendable, of course. The former general rules of court, authorizing amendments of course, are incorporated into the code. (Rules, 1790, No. 8; 1830, No. 23; 1837, No. 24; 1847, No. 22. Code, § 172. Code of 1848; § 109.) Those rules were held to allow an amendment of the declaration by change of venue, (Wakeman v. Sprague, 7 Cowen, 164, 165, 166; Hitchcock ads. Post, 1 Wend. 16,) and the code was designed to continue that practice. The notice in the summons, of the place where the complaint will be filed, was first required in 1849, and not being in the rfriginal code of 1848, (§ 109,) this change in the form of the summons does not affect the right to amend the complaint, given by the code in 1848, and still in force without change. After appearance and answer, the summons is of no importance.
    [New York Special Teem,
    August 9, 1864.
   By the Court,

Geo. G. Barnard, J.

The plaintiff had a right so to amend his complaint, of course, and without costs.

Motion denied.

Geo. G. Barnard, Justice.]  