
    Jacob Pollack, Respondent, v. Louis Wieiner et al., Appellants.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    November, 1907.)
    Bill of particulars — Failure to comply — Effect of noncompliance — Defective bill.
    Where defendants serve a bill of particulars of their counterclaim, in compliance with an order therefor, and no motion is made for a further bill of particulars, it is error to reject testimony, offered in support of the' counterclaim on the trial, on the ground that the bill filed was insufficient and defective.
    Appeal by defendants from a judgment of the Municipal' Court of the city of New York, seventh district, borough of Manhattan, rendered in favor of ,the plaintiff.
    Rudolph Cherurg, for appellants.’
    Laurence J. Bershad, for respondent.
   Leventritt, J.

The plaintiff sued to recover an unpaid balance for carpenter work, performed under a contract with the defendants, who pleaded a general denial and set up a counterclaim for damages resulting from a breach of the contract. Upon the defendants’ failure to comply with a demand made for the particulars of the counterclaim, the plaintiff moved for a hill and the motion was, on'the 14th of January, 190J, granted by default; and, thereafter, an order was entered, reciting the particulars which the defendants should furnish within three days, and providing that, upon failure to comply, the defendants would be precluded from offering on the trial proof in support of their counterclaim. Within the specified time the defendants filed a bill which they claimed was a compliance with the order. No further steps were taken by the plaintiff with reference to the hill. The cause came to trial before a jury on the 16th of April, 1907; and, when the defendants tendered evidence to sustain their counterclaim, the plaintiff objected that the bill filed was not in compliance with the order and invoked the provision which precluded the evidence. The defendants insisted that the order had been obeyed; but the learned trial justice held to the contrary, rejected the testimony, and the defendants excepted to the ruling. From a judgment entered upon a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants appealed, assigning as error the rejection of the evidence offered.

It was error to exclude evidence of the counterclaim. The ■defendants, having served a bill which they deemed a compliance with the order, were not in default. If the plaintiff claimed the bill defective or insufficient, he should have moved for a further bill. He cannot wait until the trial, without intimating" that the bill does not meet the requirements of the order, and then, for the first time, advance his objection and invoke the drastic provision precluding the giving of testimony. Faller v. Ranger, 99 App. Div. 374; Reader v. Haggin, 114 id. 112.

Gildersleeve and Erlarger, JJ., concur.

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