To the plaintiffs’ writ dated November 13, 1878, and alleging with due and proper detail and description the existence upon September 25, 1866, of a highway in their city which they were bound to keep in repair, and the unlawful erection and maintenance by the defendant from that date to the date of the writ, of certain dams which raised the water to such a height as to overflow and damage their road and render it at times impassable, and put them to a yearly expense of two hundred dollars for repairs, and an.expense of one thousand dol*555lars for raising the road to protect it from such flowing — the defendant, at the October term, 1882, interposed a plea against the further maintenance of the action, because, he says, that the plaintiffs on September 25, 1876, sued out a writ against him " setting forth the same identical cause of action set forth in the present writ,” upon which he pleaded to the merits, had a verdict in his favor, and since the last continuance of this action, to wit, on the thirty-first day of May, 1882, he recovered final judgment on the said verdict. To this plea the plaintiffs filed a general demurrer which was overruled and the plaintiffs excepted to the overruling of their demurrer, asking that they may be allowed to replead in case this court should sustain the ruling at nisi prius.
Their counsel now presents an elaborate argument in support of his contention that this is a plea puis darrein continuance — that all other defences are thereby waived, and if it is found bad on demurrer, judgment must go peremptorily against the defendant, leaving only a question of damages to be settled — and that the plea is fatally defective in not giving the date of the last continuance, and also that it is bad because it does not show a judgment that bars plaintiffs’ recovery, for the reason that it sets up a former judgment covering a part only of the plaintiffs’ cause of action, when that cause is a continuing and divisible one and damages are alleged to have accrued since the date of the former writ — in other words, that it is no answer to the claim here alleged for damages accruing between September 25, 1876, (the date of the writ upon which judgment has been rendered) and November 28, 1878, the date of the writ in the present case, and hence-a bad plea, because no answer to the whole matter contained in the declaration.
And defendant insists as strenuously upon the overruling of the exceptions and a final judgment in his favor because he says the omission of the date of the last continuance is a defect in form only and cannot be taken advantage of on general demurrer; and as to the objection that the. former judgment is no bar to the whole of the plaintiffs’ claim, it is not open to them, because they have admitted, by demurring without first praying oyer of *556the judgment relied on so as to make it part of their demurrer, that it is the identical cause of action set forth in the present suit as the plea asserts.
We do not think that the position taken by either of the parties can be sustained to its full extent, or thát it can be said here that there does " sufficient matter appear in (these) pleadings upon which the court may give judgment according to the very right of the cause.” There is enough in the plea itself to negative the assertion that the judgment in the former suit included the whole matter set forth as a cause of action in this.
It is simply impossible in the nature of things that the whole of the claim here set forth could have been embraced in a writ dated September 25, 1876. No admission of the identity of the causes of action which the plaintiffs could make by demurring can countervail the effect of a perusal of the declaration and the plea. There is no answer whatever in the plea to so much of the plaintiffs’ claim in this suit as is alleged to have accrued since the date of the writ in the other case. It may be that no damage was suffered by the plaintiffs until since then. Purporting, as it does, to be an answer to the whole declaration, and being found to answer only a part, the plea is bad on demurrer. See Osborne v. Rogers, 1 Williams’s Saunders, 264, and Earl of Manchester v. Vale, Id. 27, and the learned notes of Serjeant Williams on these cases, and the authorities therein cited. See also, Staples v. Spring, (York Co.) 10 Mass. 72. Moreover it is uniformly held that a plea puis darrein continuance is a waiver of all other pleas, and that if held bad on demurrer the defendant is liable to final judgment against him. Jewett v. Jewett, 58 Maine, 234, and authorities there cited; Morse v. Small, 73 Maine, 565. It is plain both upon principle and authority that the demurrer to the plea must be sustained. The plea is bad both in form and substance.
But we do not. think it follows from this or from the authorities above cited that the court is bound in all cases to render final judgment against the defendant whose plea puis darrein continuance is found insufficient, or that all power is taken from the court to award a repleader upon lawful terms when justice seems *557to require it. That the defendant is liable to such judgment when nothing appears in the case to show that injustice would thereby be done him, is all that is actually settled by the cases above cited from our own reports. The discretionary power of the court to award a repleader in proper cases is not called in question in them. In McKeen v. Parker, a hasty reading of which might tend to the opposite conclusion, the ruling in question, really, was that the defendant was entitled to replead as matter of right. The court had t-he whole case before them, and finding no such right in the defendant, and no application to or exercise of the discretionary power of the court, or any occasion for its interposition, they simply affirmed the general doctrine which unquestionably is that upon the failure of such a plea the defendant has no absolute legal right to replead. Hence judgment will be final unless the court sees cause to exercise its discretionary power to award a repleader in furtherance of justice. That is the extent of these and like decisions. But the whole course of legislation and decision has latterly been to extend the power of the court to enable parties to secure the determination of all causes upon their real merits unembarrassed by the technicalities of pleading.
It cannot be doubted that ample power is left in E. S., c. 82, § 19, to this court and to a judge at nisi prius after ruling on a demurrer and before exceptions allowed to permit the party found in fault to replead or amend upon payment of costs, when there is reason to believe that the former pleadings did not properly present the party’s case.
Indeed this power may be said to be inherent and incidental, in all courts where it has not been cut off by statute provisions, like the power to take off a default at anytime before final judgment when the default has been unwittingly made and it is shown that the defendant has a defence which seems worthy of consideration.
Nor is there anything more sacred and imperative in the duty of the court to render final judgment forthwith after sustaining or overruling a demurrer to a plea puis darrein continuance, than after passing upon a demurrer to any sole plea in bar. *558We think the same rule should prevail as that which was laid down as applicable in the case of demurrers to pleas in bar in Mayberry v. Brackett, 72 Maine, 102.
The obligation depends in each instance upon the judgment of the court as to whether all has been heard that merits consideration— whether enough appears in the pleadings to satisfy them that they can, in the language of the statute of Anne, "give judgment thereupon according to the very right of the cause.”
The defendant’s plea, though not an answer to the whole of the plaintiffs’ case, is a perfect defence pro tanto, and indicates with no slight force that the question as to the remainder may well be regarded as a debatable one.
We do not think the defendant ought to be precluded • from such defence as he may be able to present' on the merits to so much of the plaintiffs’ claim as the plaintiffs are still at liberty to assert against him. Both parties may probably find it necessary to amend their pleadings in order to present precisely the true limits of their controversy as now defined. The defendant has liberty to replead upon payment of costs since the filing of the demurrer, and upon filing his new pleadings within the time required by the statute and rules of court.
Exceptions and demurrer sustained.
Repleader awarded on payment of costs.
Danyorth, YiRGiN, Libbey and Symonds, JJ., concurred.