Monson v. Beecher

Pardee, J.

Upon the 7th day of August, 1875, the defendant, Mrs. Beecher, then having and living with a husband, executed and delivered to the plaintiffs her promissory note for $258. This not being paid at maturity the plaintiffs brought an action thereon. The declaration contained a special count upon the note, together with the common counts in general assumpsit. The writ was made returnable to the Court of Common Pleas for New Haven County at the June term, 1876; thence the cause came by legal continuances to the October term, 1877. The defendant appeared at the return day, but filed no plea during the first term. A rule of the court provides that the plea must in all cases be filed during the first term, and the pleadings must be closed before the opening of the second term. Cases in which the plea is not so filed will, in thg absence of special order, be considered as standing on the statute general issue, without notice.” No special order was made in this case.

Upon the trial at the October term, 1877, the plaintiffs claimed to recover only upon the note, and offered to file the same as their bill of particulars. The defendant objected, insisting that the original note declared upon could not be used for that purpose. The court permitted it to be done; and to this exception was taken.

The defendant then claimed that this act of filing the note operated as an amendment of the declaration, and thus gave her an opportunity to change her plea of the general issue without notice to a like plea with notice of her coverture, *301under the statute allowing change of plea to follow change of declaration. The court refused to permit her to change her plea except upon payment of costs; and to this exception was taken.

The plaintiffs, having offered the original note in evidence, and one of them having testified1 that they owned it, that it was due and unpaid, and was the note on which the suit was brought, rested. The defendant then offered evidence to prove the coverture, under the general issue. The plaintiffs objected, and the court refused to admit it and rendered judgment for them-; the defendant filed a motion for a new-trial.

In this case the pleader followed the form usually adopted in framing declarations in actions upon promissory notes; he declared specially in one count upon the note and added the common counts as a matter of prudence, that he might thereby save a verdict even if there should occur a fatal variance between the evidence and the special count. Upon the trial the original note was offered in evidence and a statement was made that it was the only claim upon which judgment would be asked. Thereby nothing was added to or taken from the declaration. The plaintiffs did not say that they should strike out the common counts; they simply explained that no other use would be made of them than to save a bill of costs upon a possible variance. This is not an amendment in any such sense as to entitle the defendant to change her plea.

The statute, Revision of 1875, sec. 10, page 424, provides that under the general issue the defendant shall not1 “ give in evidence any matter in avoidance, or any defence consistent with the truth of the matei'ial allegations in the declaration, unless at the time of pleading he shall file notice thereof in writing, <fcc.;” and the defendant insists that by reason of her coverture she had not the legal capacity to make the promise embodied in the note; that there can be no such thing as an avoidance of that which never existed, and therefore that the court erred in refusing permission to prove that coverture under the general issue.

*302Of fraud as a defence, in connection with this statute, in Hoxie v. Home Insurance Co., 32 Conn., 21, the court said: “ The fraud of the master was barratry, (notwithstanding he was part owner,) and a peril insured against, unless the other owner or the plaintiff assented to it. It was essential to the intended defence therefore, that either the original combination or the subsequent assent should be proved. The one goes to show that the contract, although primé facie valid, was void; the other, that the evil practice of the master, which -was primé facie barratry, was not such, but the fraud of the other owner and the plaintiff also; and botli were matter of avoidance, and should have been inserted in the notice. The action is assumpsit on an express contract, and doubtless under the rules of the common law as gradually relaxed from -their original strictness, and existing prior to the statute of 1848, would be admissible under the general issue alone. But that statute changed the common law in that respect, and since its passage fraud, if relied upon, must be s.et up. If there is an apparent distinction between fraud which goes to the original validity of the contract, and fraud which operates in avoidance of it after its execution, that distinction is not real and seems to be practically disregarded in the recent rules incorporated into the English practice. * * * And so, according to the construction given by us to the statute in the recent case of Mahaiwe Bank v. Douglass, 31 Conn., 170, the evidence of fraud was clearly matter of avoidance also, and within it. There we held the evidence admissible under the general issue, because it showed that the contract set up never was in fact executed by the defendant. Here the execution of the contract is conceded, and the defence should have been set up in the notice; and for that reason the testimony was rightfully excluded.” What is there said of fraud may be said here with equal force of coverture; each is present at the inception of the contract; but the interpretation by the court of the statute suggests that it disregards the distinction between void and voidable contracts, and requires this defendant, if, after having put her name to a promissory note, she intends to rely upon her *303coverture as a defence against the consequences of that act, to give warning thereof in writing when pleading.

One of the English rules, adopted in 1834, provides that “in every species of assumspit, all matters in confession and avoidance, including not only those by way of discharge but those which show the transaction to be either void or voidable in point of law, on the ground of fraud or otherwise, shall be specially pleaded; ex. gr., infancy, coverture, * * and various other defences must be pleaded;” herein expressly placing void and voidable contracts upon the same basis, for this particular purpose. Mr. Ohitty says that these rules put an end to the misapplication and abuse of the general issue, and compel a defendant in terms to deny particular parts of the declaration and to plead specially every matter of defence not merely consisting of denial of the allegations in it.

An act of Parliament, 16 and 17 Victoria, c. 113, sec. 70, provides that every defence which admits a contract in fact, but relies upon matter in avoidance or discharge or illegality, on the ground of fraud or otherwise, as for instance infancy, coverture, &c., shall be pleaded specially.

For the purpose of placing limitations upon the general issue coverture seems to have been classed in England, in rule and statute, as matter in avoidance; and thus it should be under our own statute.

There should be no new trial.

In this opinion the other judges concurred; except Carpenter, J., who did not sit.