This action was brought in the City Court to recover a balance of $64í. 22 due on a promissory note made by the defendant to the order of S. Levy & Co., and by the latter trans*853ferred to the plaintiff after maturity. In its answer the defendant set up facts which constituted a good counterclaim on a promissory note of $1,000 made by S. Levy & Co., plaintiff’s assignor, to the order of the defendant, but the defendant designated its facts as a.set-off, and asked for the dismissal of the complaint.
The plaintiff served a reply to this answer, which, while containing denials, set up no affirmative defense. Upon the trial the $1,000 note set up in the answer and referred to therein as a set-off was admitted in evidence over the objection of the plaintiff, who contended that facts constituting a counterclaim must he designated as such in order to be available as a counterclaim. Plaintiff then sought to show that the note set up as a counterclaim was made for the accommodation of the defendant. On this point the trial court ruled against the plaintiff on the ground that no such defense was pleaded in the reply. Bach party then moved for a direction of a verdict, and a verdict was directed for the defendant. Judgment on the merits was entered in favor of the defendant for $76.48, costs.
On appeal to the Appellate Term this judgment was reversed and a new trial granted. The Appellate Term took the view that the facts relied upon as a counterclaim were not available as such because they were designated as a set-off and not as a counterclaim; that, therefore, the reply was unnecessary and the plaintiff should have been permitted to show the accommodation character of the note set up in the answer, as if no reply had been served.
We think the Appellate Term erred. The facts pleaded in the answer, if established, constituted a good counterclaim. (Knickerbocker Trust Co. v. Condon, 147 App. Div. 871; affd., without opinion, 212 N. Y. 613; Cable Flax Mills v. Early, 72 App. Div. 213, 215; Nelson Co. v. Silver, 160 id. 445, 448.) They were treated as such by. the plaintiff and he replied to them. Although those facts were referred to as an offset, the plaintiff was left in no doubt as to what the pleader intended. For this reason, the reasoning in American Guild v. Damon (186 N. Y. 360, 364), cited in the opinion of the Appellate Term, does not apply here. In that case it was held that defendant, in the .absence of a reply, could not preclude plaintiff from con*854testing a counterclaim unless it was distinctly named as a counterclaim in the answer. In the case at bar there was a reply, and, therefore, no such strict rule applies; the plaintiff understood and treated the answer as setting up a counterclaim.
The cases in which a plaintiff may contest a counterclaim where no reply has been served are those in which the facts constituting the counterclaim are not expressly designated as such. As was said in Acer v. Hotchkiss (97 N. Y. 408): u Such a rule is essential to protect a plaintiff from being misled by an answer, and to prevent the snare of a counterclaim lurking under the cover of a supposed defense, and unconsciously admitted by a failure to reply.”
In the case at bar the plaintiff was not misled. He did reply, but failed to set up his defense to the counterclaim.
The determination of the Appellate Term is reversed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Term, and the judgment of the City Court affirmed.
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Smith, JJ., concurred.
Determination reversed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Term, and judgment of City Court affirmed.