Opinion
December 2, 1910.
Andrew G. Loomis, for the appellant.
A.C. Cass, for the respondent.
A summons was served on April 19, 1904. The defendant, within 20 days thereafter, appeared and demanded a copy of the complaint. The attorney for defendant deposes that in February, 1905, an unverified complaint was served, which was duly returned because it was not served in time, and that no other proceedings were had herein until June, 1910, when plaintiff moved for leave to serve a complaint. The burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to satisfy the court that there was a reasonable excuse for this delay. ( Martin v. McCurdy, 120 App. Div. 665.) There was no reasonable excuse given. The plaintiff deposes that she could never find out from her former attorney until recently what was done with the case; that she went to see him many times, when he told her that he was waiting for "a decision in the Court of Appeals," and she asserts that the delay was not through her fault. But the difficulty is that this is not a controversy between her and her attorney over this delay, but between her and the other party to the action. The action is by servant against master to recover for negligence whereby the cylinder of a boiler burst. The defendant deposes that his former employee, Hager, whose work was about the boiler, and who was thoroughly familiar with its condition at the time of the accident, died 14 months ago; that he cannot now find Bachman, another employee, who was present at the time of the accident and who was familiar with the facts, although he has made diligent efforts to find him, which are detailed in his affidavit; and that the same condition is true as to his former foreman, Eisenhuber, who was fully acquainted with the condition of the cylinder and came immediately upon the scene of the accident, and who was in his employ within a year. And there are presented other reasons more or less cogent why the prosecution of this action, after this delay of years, would be a hardship upon the defendant. It is the plaintiff's misfortune that her case has grown so stale, but it would be the misfortune of the defendant if, after this lapse of time for which he is in no part responsible, he were brought into court deprived of several of the witneses upon whom he relied for exculpation. The courts cannot, out of sympathy for one litigant, work injustice to the other.
The orders are reversed, with $10 costs and disbursements; the motion granting leave to serve a complaint is denied, with costs, and the cross-motion for a dismissal of the complaint is granted, with costs.
HIRSCHBERG, P.J., WOODWARD, THOMAS and RICH, JJ., concurred.
Orders reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granting leave to serve a complaint denied, with costs, and the cross-motion for a dismissal of the complaint granted, with costs.