Robinson v. . Willoughby

The opinion of the Court contains a sufficient statement of the points involved.

The defendant insisted that his Honor had no power to grant leave to amend; and that if leave were granted, terms must be imposed. His Honor allowed the motion without costs, and the defendant appealed. This is the same case that was before the Court at June Term, 1871,65 N.C. 520, in which it was decided that the deed *Page 63 from Christenbury, under whom both parties claimed, title, was a mortgage, and not an absolute sale, as claimed by the plaintiff; and upon that ground, a new trial was granted. When the case came on for trial again, in the Court below, the plaintiff moved for leave to amend, by changing his action for the recovery of the land into one for the foreclosure of the mortgage. The motion was allowed, and the defendant appealed from this decision of his Honor, insisting that his Honor had not the power to allow this amendment. We think his Honor, under sec. 132, C. C. P., not only possessed the discretionary (85) power to allow this amendment, but that it was a fit case for the exercise of the power. The plaintiff had instituted his action believing, that the transaction attending the execution of his deed, taken altogether, constituted a sale, with an agreement for a resale, and his Honor on the trial below so decided; but this Court reversed the decision of his Honor, and declared that, looking at the whole transaction, it constituted a mortgage, and not a sale with an agreement for a re-sale.

The object of the action, in its original form, was to ascertain the plaintiff's rights growing out of the transaction attending the execution of the deed, and this is the very object to be ascertained in the action as amended.

This Court, in Bullard v. Johnson, 65 N.C. 436, has already, substantially, decided the question raised in this case. In that case, his Honor, the Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion of the Court, says, speaking of sec. 132, C. C. P.,"This provision and numerous others, of the C. C. P., show that its purpose is to prevent actions from being defeated on grounds that do not affect the merits of the controversy, whenever it can be done by amendment, the prevailing idea being to settle controversies by one action, and there by prevent the loss of the labor and money expended in that action, and the necessity for incurring like labor and expense in a second." This Court, regards these provisions of the Code among the most important it contains, and we are inclined to give them their full operation, by a liberal construction; so as to let one action settle all the questions growing out of the same transaction, whenever it can be done.

The question of the payment of costs was for his Honor below, and is not the subject of review in this Court.

PER CURIAM. Affirmed.

Cited: S. c., 70 N.C. 358; Wall v. Fairley, Ib., 537; Ely v. Early,94 N.C. 6; Martin v. McNeely, 101 N.C. 638. *Page 64

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