1. Understanding Your Response Obligations under New York Law
The New York Civil Practice Law and Rules (CPLR) sets a firm 20-day deadline to file your answer after service of a complaint. This timeline is not a suggestion; courts enforce it strictly. An answer must respond to each allegation in the complaint by admitting, denying, or stating that you lack knowledge of the facts. You also must raise any affirmative defenses—legal arguments that concede the plaintiff's facts but argue you are not liable anyway—in the same document.
Many defendants misunderstand what an answer does. It is not a place to tell your side of the story in narrative form. Instead, it is a technical pleading that either admits or denies each numbered paragraph of the complaint. If you fail to deny an allegation, it is deemed admitted. This can be devastating. In practice, these responses are rarely as clean as the statute suggests; ambiguity in the complaint often forces strategic choices about whether to deny or claim lack of knowledge.
The Cost of Missing Deadlines
A missed deadline can result in a default judgment against you, meaning the court enters judgment in the plaintiff's favor without ever hearing your defense. New York courts may grant relief from default in limited circumstances, but only if you act quickly and demonstrate a meritorious defense. The burden is high. Filing an answer on time is your first and most critical obligation.
2. Crafting Effective Affirmative Defenses
Affirmative defenses are the heart of a strong answer to a civil complaint. These are legal arguments that do not dispute the plaintiff's allegations but argue that even if they are true, you should not be held liable. Common examples include statute of limitations, assumption of risk, comparative negligence, and breach of contract defenses. If you do not plead an affirmative defense in your answer, you waive it forever, even if you later discover evidence supporting it.
Selecting which defenses to assert requires judgment. Pleading too many weak defenses dilutes your credibility and can signal to the court that you lack a coherent strategy. Pleading too few may leave you without a critical defense if facts develop during discovery. As counsel, I often advise clients to identify the three to five strongest defenses supported by the complaint's allegations or by facts already known to the defendant.
Statute of Limitations and Other Time-Based Defenses
One of the most powerful affirmative defenses is the statute of limitations. If the plaintiff filed the complaint after the legal deadline for bringing that type of claim has passed, the case should be dismissed. New York has different limitations periods for different causes of action: three years for most contract disputes, three years for personal injury, and six years for fraud. Asserting this defense in your answer preserves it; if you omit it, you may lose the right to raise it later, even if the claim is clearly time-barred.
3. The Answer As Strategic Positioning in New York Courts
Your answer also sets the stage for discovery and settlement negotiations. Defendants sometimes view the answer as a formality to be completed quickly. In reality, it is your first opportunity to signal your defense theory and to define the issues the other side must prove. An answer that is vague or overly broad may invite broader discovery requests. An answer that is specific and well-crafted can narrow the scope of what the plaintiff can demand.
In New York Supreme Court, the answer is filed with the court and served on the plaintiff's attorney. The court does not typically review answers unless there is a motion to dismiss or a dispute about whether defenses have been waived. However, the answer becomes part of the record and can be cited in later motions and at trial. Courts often refer back to the answer when evaluating whether a defendant has contradicted prior admissions or denials.
New York Supreme Court'S Treatment of Amended Answers
New York Supreme Court permits amendments to an answer in limited circumstances. With the opposing party's consent, you may amend freely. Without consent, you need the court's permission, which is usually granted if you seek it promptly and the amendment does not unfairly prejudice the other side. However, the court will not allow you to add new affirmative defenses after the deadline for responding to the complaint has passed unless you can show good cause. This strict rule means your initial answer must be comprehensive.
4. Denials, Admissions, and Counterclaims
Each paragraph of the complaint requires a response. A simple denial states that you dispute the allegation. A qualified denial admits part of the allegation and denies the rest. A statement that you lack knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief about the allegation is treated as a denial. You cannot simply refuse to respond; silence is treated as an admission.
Your answer may also include a counterclaim if you have a claim against the plaintiff arising from the same transaction or occurrence. A counterclaim is not required, but it can be strategic. It shifts some burden to the plaintiff and may provide leverage in settlement discussions. Counterclaims are governed by the same rules as a complaint; they must plead facts with sufficient detail to give the other side notice of your claim.
Consider also whether you should file a civil complaint against a third party (a third-party claim) if someone else bears responsibility for the harm the plaintiff alleges. This must be done within the same lawsuit and is subject to court approval. A well-timed third-party claim can shift liability and pressure the plaintiff to settle.
Common Mistakes in Denials and Admissions
Defendants often make strategic errors when drafting denials. Admitting facts you do not need to admit weakens your position. Denying facts that are clearly true damages your credibility with the judge. The safest approach is to admit facts that are indisputably true and deny or qualify facts that are disputed or misleading. If the complaint alleges a contract existed and you signed a document, admit the contract's existence but deny liability for breach if that is your defense.
| Response Type | Effect |
| Admission | Fact is accepted as true; cannot be contradicted at trial |
| Denial | Fact is disputed; plaintiff must prove it at trial |
| Lack of Knowledge | Treated as denial; plaintiff bears burden of proof |
| Affirmative Defense | Concedes facts but argues legal reason for no liability |
When a complaint for damages in civil court lands on your desk, your instinct may be to deny everything. That approach backfires. Courts expect reasonable admissions and view wholesale denials as evasive. Your credibility is an asset; protect it by admitting what is true and defending what is disputed.
5. Strategic Considerations before Filing
Before you file your answer, evaluate whether a motion to dismiss might be more effective. If the complaint fails to state a legal claim or contains procedural defects, a motion to dismiss can resolve the case before you must file an answer. This motion must be filed within the time you would otherwise file your answer. If the motion is denied, you then have time to file your answer. A successful motion to dismiss saves discovery costs and may end the case entirely.
You should also assess whether settlement discussions are viable. An answer does not preclude settlement; in fact, the act of filing a substantive answer sometimes prompts the plaintiff to reconsider the case's value. Early settlement can be far less expensive than years of litigation. Your attorney should evaluate the strength of the plaintiff's allegations, the damages claimed, your insurance coverage, and the costs of defense before deciding whether to fight or negotiate.
Real-world outcomes depend heavily on how carefully you prepare your answer and how thoroughly you preserve your defenses. Rushing this document or treating it as a mere procedural hurdle is a common and costly mistake. Your answer is your first and sometimes your best opportunity to shape the litigation.
09 Mar, 2026

