
    J. J. Little & Ives Company, Respondent, v. Lecouver Press Company, Appellant.
    First Department,
    February 11, 1916.
    Pleading — denials of knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief—when motion to test sufficiency of such denials should be made before trial.
    Where a complaint alleges that the plaintiff rendered certain work, labor and services and furnished materials to the defendant at its special instance and request and for which it agreed to pay a certain amount as the fair and reasonable value, and the answer denies any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the allegation that the defendant agreed to pay a stated amount, and also denies upon information and belief that said amount represents the fair and reasonable value of the work, services and labor performed and materials furnished, the sufficiency of such denials should be tested by motion in advance of the trial.
    It is too late to move upon the trial itself for the direction of a verdict upon the ground of the insufficiency of the denials.
    Appeal by the defendant, Lecouver Press Company, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff,
    
      entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 13th day of October, 1915, upon the verdict of a jury rendered by direction of the court.
    
      Alfred H. Holbrook, for the appellant.
    
      Sol. Kohn, for the respondent.
   Dowling, J. :

Ooncededly, the learned trial court was in error in requiring the defendant to elect upon which of its defenses it would go to trial. But this error was not vital, as we do not believe the second separate defense was good, inasmuch as it contained no denial of the allegations in the complaint that the agreed value of the work, labor and services performed and materials furnished was as set forth therein, viz., $4,716.27, and the other averments are mainly of conclusions rather than of facts. In respect to the first separate defense a different situation exists. When defendant, under compulsion, had elected to go to trial thereon, the motion for the direction of a verdict was based on the ground that “that alleged defence is no defence in law, that it is no denial, that it is a denial merely on information as to matters which must be within the knowledge of the defendant.” The complaint sets forth: “That in September and October, 1911, the plaintiff rendered certain work, labor and services and furnished materials to the defendant at its special instance and request, of the fair and reasonable value, and for which it agreed to pay the sum of Four thousand seven hundred and sixteen and 27/100 dollars ($4,716.27).” The answer of the defendant contains under the first separate defense the following paragraphs:

Second. Denies any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the allegations set forth in paragraph ‘ Third ’ of said complaint wherein it is stated that the defendant'agreed to pay for said work, labor and services and materials the sum of Four thousand seven hundred sixteen and 27/100 Dollars ($4,716.27).
Third. Denies upon information and belief that the sum of Four thousand seven hundred sixteen and 27/100 Dollars ($4,716.27) as set forth in paragraph ‘Third’ of the complaint represents the fair and reasonable value of the said work, labor and services performed and materials furnished to the defendant.”

We think that the sufficiency of these denials should have been tested in advance of the trial by motion, and that it was too late to move upon the trial itself. The rule was laid down in Kirschbaum v. Eschmann (205 N. Y. 127), where (after quoting from Dahlstrom v. Gemunder [198 N. Y. 454] to the effect that a denial of knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the payment or satisfaction of-a judgment in a prior litigation for the same cause was not a sufficient or honest denial as it was quite incredible that the plaintiff should have had no knowledge concerning the termination of his lawsuit, and equally incredible that after the lapse of two years he should neither have received nor sought information on the subject) Judge Werner proceeded to say (p. 134): “This form of denial, in short, is never permissible to traverse an allegation of a fact which must be within the personal knowledge of the person who is called upon to admit or deny, and when it is used in such circumstances it may be stricken out on motion- as sham, or it may be disregarded at the trial. (Pomeroy’s Remedies, etc., sec. 641.) We think a different rule applies, however, where this form of denial is used to meet allegations of fact which are only presumptively within the knowledge of the person making the denial; or where the defect in the pleading is such that the court may, upon proper terms and conditions, permit it to be changed or amended. In such cases it is obviously the correct practice for the party who attacks the pleading to make the proper motion before trial as the attacked pleader then has the opportunity to establish his good faith, if he can, and to prove that he cannot honestly go further than to deny knowledge or information, or make his pleading more definite or certain than it is. A single familiar instance will serve to illustrate this point. When an action is brought against a corporation or copartnership the complaint usually charges many things which are presumptively within the knowledge of the officers or the partners, and yet their only knowledge may have been derived wholly from their agents, employees or from third persons under circumstances which render it impossible to make a positive averment. In such cases the person who verifies an answer that is challenged should have an opportunity to meet the presumption of knowledge which the law raises against him, and this can only be done on a motion before trial where the pleader can defend his pleading with affidavits showing the circumstances which justify its lack of greater certainty and definiteness.”

This rule was applied in Cerlian v. Bacon (155 App. Div. 118), which was an appeal from an order granting plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. That was an action for work, labor and services performed and materials furnished which “ were reasonably worth, and defendant then and there promised and agreed to pay therefor, the sum of two hundred dollars.” Defendant (an individual) denied any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to these allegations. The court quoted from Kirschbaum v. Eschmann (supra) and proceeded to say: “As the purpose of requiring a motion to be made before trial when denials are only presumptively bad because based upon lack of information or belief is that the attacked party may establish his good faith or show that he can honestly make no more specific denial, it follows, by necessary implication, that the motion must be made under a section of the Code which will permit the answer to be defended or justified by affidavit. It cannot be so justified or defended on a motion made under section 517, but can be if made under section 537 or 538, the motion being made upon the ground that the answer (or reply) is either frivolous or sham.” It was then held that the denials in question were only presumptively frivolous and that “ the proper practice, as outlined by the latest decisions of the Court of Appeals, would have been for the plaintiff to move for judgment upon the answer as frivolous when the defendant would have had the opportunity of proving, if she could, that her denials were made in good faith and were only apparently but not really frivolous. ”

The judgment appealed from will be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.

Clarke, P. J., Soott, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.

Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.  