
    Robert Kennedy, Respondent, v. Zenjuro Horikoshi, Appellant.
    
      Beference — not ordered against the objection of the defendant, who has interposed a counterclaim requiring the examination of a long account.
    
    Where the complaint in an action sets out a cause of action on contract, and this is put in issue by the answer, which also sets up a counterclaim requiring the examination of a long account, it is improper to order a reference of all the issues on the motion of the plaintiff, against the objection of the defendant.
    Appeal by the defendant, Zenjuro Horikoshi, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Kings County Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 12th day of January, 1903, referring the issues in the above-entitled action to a referee to hear and determine.
    
      C. F. Goddard, for the appellant.
    
      M. Linn Bruce, for the respondent.
   Willard Bartlett, J.:

We agree with the learned judge who made the order at Special Term, that the pleadings, in this action, if the counterclaim be left out of consideration, do not authorize a compulsory order of reference.

The -motion was granted solely because the learned judge thought that the examination of a long account was rendered inevitable by the allegations of the counterclaim. It is settled, however, that where the plaintiff’s cause of action is disputed, a counterclaim cannot operate to make the case referable by compulsion which otherwise would not thus be referable. Where the complaint sets out a cause of action on contract and this is put in issue by the answer, which also sets up a counterclaim requiring the examination of a long account, it is error to order a reference of all the issues on the motion of the plaintiff against the objection of the defendant. (Steck v. Colorado Fuel & Iron Co., 142 N. Y. 236.) In the case cited this proposition was laid down in a carefully considered opinion of the Court of Appeals by Earl, J., against the dissent of three members of the court, expressed in a carefully written opinion by Chief Judge Andrews. We do not find that the decision on this point has since been qualified or questioned, and it is clearly our duty to follow it.

The order of reference must, therefore, -be reversed.

Goodrich, P. J., Woodward, Hirsohberg and Hooker, JJ., concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollars . costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with costs.  