Our opinion is that the defendant should have been permitted to file a rejoinder, setting up its discontinuance as to the claims pleaded in set-off of its suit of August 8, 1896, to the replication of a pending suit to the plea in set-off. Notwithstanding authorities to the contrary cited by the plaintiff, 1 Chit. Pl. *470; Com. v. Churchill, 5 Mass. 174;Demond v. Crary, 1 Fed. Rep. 480; Swart v. Borst, 17 How. Pr. 69, we think the tendency of the later cases and a preponderance of authority sustain the defendant's contention that it is a good answer to a plea of the pendency of a prior action for the same cause that the former suit has been discontinued, whether the discontinuance be before or after the filing of the plea. Page v. Mitchell, 37 Minn. 368; Warder v. Henry, 117 Mo. 530; Chamberlain v. Eckert, 2 Bissell, 124; Marston v. Lawrence, 1 John. Cas. 397; Findlay v.Keim, 62 Pa. St. 112, 118; 1 Ency. Pl. Pr. 756, note. If a good replication to a plea, it is, of course, equally good as a rejoinder to a replication when the pleadings have advanced to that stage.
The plaintiff's counsel takes the point that the decision of *Page 95 the Common Pleas Division refusing the defendant's motion for leave to file a rejoinder, its demurrer to the plea of a former suit pending having been overruled, was within the discretion of the Common Pleas Division, and not reviewable. Granting that it was discretionary, it was a discretion affecting the right of the defendant given by the statute to plead its claim in set-off, and hence a judicial discretion, and, as such, reviewable. Sullivan v. Waterman, 21 R.I. 72. The practice of granting permission to plead after the overruling of a demurrer is well established, and the policy of the court in this respect has been liberal. State v. Edgerton, 12 R.I. 104, 108; Reid v. Providence JournalCo., 20 R.I. 120, 125.
It being conceded that the defendant has brought, and has pending, a second action for the same causes as those embraced in its plea in set-off, the action having been brought to prevent a possible barring of these claims by the statute of limitation, the plaintiff claims that the defendant should not be allowed to plead by way of rejoinder the discontinuance of its former action, because this will necessarily lead to a surrejoinder of the pendency of this second action, and thus the same result will be reached as on the plea of the pendency of the former action, and the defendant may then discontinue its second action and plead such discontinuance in rebutter, and so on ad infinitum.
We do not think that the direful consequences which the plaintiff's counsel anticipates from an endless chain of pleading are likely to ensue. The plaintiff cannot set up by way of surrejoinder the pendency of the new suit, since the pendency of a suit subsequently brought cannot be pleaded, because not a pending suit when the former action was begun; though doubtless the pendency of the claims in set-off may be pleaded in abatement of the suit subsequently brought. Renner v. Marshall, 1 Wheat. 215; Webster v. Randall, 19 Pick. 13, 20; Nicholl v.Mason, 21 Wend 339.
New trial granted, and case remitted to the Common Pleas *Page 96 Division with direction to permit the defendant to file its rejoinder in accordance herewith.