Stevens v. Thompson

By the Court,

Kingman, O. J.

On the 18th of November, 1867, H. M. Thompson & Co. filed their petition, to recover the price of goods alleged to have been sold, in the district court of Leavenworth county against the firm of Schley & Bro., the members of which company were alleged to be William *308F. Schley, Henry Schley and Thomas C. Stevens. The members of the firm of H. M. Thompson & Co. were stated to be Henry M. Thompson, and Luther McConnell. To this petition Stevens, the plaintiff in error, answered by setting up a general denial, and Schley & Bro. answered for themselves by a similar defense. On the 18th of January following the plaintiffs had leave to amend their petition by making John Schmall a party plaintiff. This amendment was afterwards made by rewriting the petition, with the addition of making Schmall a member of the firm of H. M. Thompson & Co., and one of the plaintiffs; on this petition, so amended, process was issued and served on the several defendants. To this petition, so amended, Schley & Bro. answered, setting up as grounds of defense: First, a general denial; 'second, payments; third, a special denial that Stevens was one of the firm of Schley & Bro. To this answer a reply was filed. No new answer was filed by the plaintiff in error, Stevens. On the trial of the cause after the plaintiff’s evidence was in, they claimed that there was a default on the part of Stevens, and the • court so held. The plaintiff then dismissed the action as to the two Schleys and the trial proceeded as an inquiry as to the assessment of damages against Stevens. The instructions of the court were based upon the previous decision that Stevens was in default; the jury being told that the only question for them to determine was the value of the goods at the time they were delivered. A verdict was returned against Stevens for the amount claimed. A motion for a new trial was made on which various affidavits were read, and on which several questions were raised and argued in this court. These questions we shall not consider, as the conclusions we have reached render it unnecessary to pass upon them. For .the same reason we do not 'feel called *309upon to determine whether the decision of the court as to there being a default on tbe part of Stevens was made ■and excepted to as tbe law requires; nor whether certain rulings as to tbe admissibility of evidence were correct, as they may not and probably, will not arise upon another trial. Tbe main question raised -especially upon tbe instruction if not elsewhere, is whether Stevens was in default. Tbe reissue and service of tbe summons can have no bearing on this question, for tbe summons bad already performed its functions of bringing tbe parties before tbe coiut and it can serve no other purpose.

praADntGs; petition. The petition was npt a new. one; it was an amended petition differing from tbe original only in this that Scbmall was alleged to be one of the members of tbe firm of H. M: Thompson & Go., and was made a party plaintiff. Is this such- an amendment as requires a new answer ?

Answering Same in chancery. In tbe old chancery practice tbe rule was that when a complainant amends bis bill after answer, it was tbe right of tbe defendant to put in a new or a further answer to tbe amended bill, except where th e amendment was a mere matter of form which could not vary tbe rights of tbe defendant. But in tbe answer to 'the amended bill it was not allowable to repeat tbe allegations of tbe former answer unless tbe grounds of tbe suit and the defense to tbe same were waived in substance. [See Bowen and others v. Idley, 6 Paige’s, Ch. R., 48.] But while this was tbe right of the defendant be was at liberty, unless specially required, to answer to some new charge in tbe bill, to let bis first answer remain as putting in issue all tbe matters properly raised by it. At common law it seems a similar practice prevailed. [Tidd’s Pr., 708 and note E, and 6 Taunton, 673.] Therein it was held that an amendment does not necessarily entitle tbe defendant *310to plead de novo, but only where the amendment alters the state of the defendant’s cause.

In: Under the Coae. Now the code of civil procedure is much more liberal in permitting amendments, and making 'the precision and technicalities of the rules of pleading yield to the great object of assisting the parties in obtaining justice, than was the common law. It permits amendments to be made to the pleadings during the trial; and even after trial and judgment the court may amend by adding or striking out the name of a party, [§ 139,] to make the pleadings conform to the proof; in this case the amendment jvas, adding the name of a party only. The answer of plaintiff in error, when it was filed, put in issue every.fact in the plaintiff’s pleadings, original and amended, save perhaps the simple one that Schmall was a member of the firm of II. M. Thompson & Co., and a necessary party, in interest, in the action.

How, then, can he be said to be in default ? He had appeared in the action; had filed an answer, controverting such of the statements of the plaintiff’s petition as he deemed essential. The restatement of the facts, in the amended petition, did not change the grounds of the action.

Whatever of the original petition or the amendment is not controverted, must be taken as true, and need not be proven. But all the statements, in both of the petitions, save one, were denied, and so the case stood upon the record when the cause was tiled. As we understand the code, this made it incumbent on the plaintiff to make out their case by evidence. The jury were instructed that the only question for them to consider, was the value of the goods when delivered. This was the law of the case, if the plaintiff in error.was in default’; but as we have seen that such was not the condition of the case, *311the instruction was erroneous, and 'for this reason the judgment must be reversed. As the case goes back for such trial as this opinion requires, we may as well settle a question presented in the record, and argued in the case, and which may arise in another trial. We do not think that payment can be proven under the issue as presented. The case is wholly unlike that of Marley v. Smith, [4 Kas., 185.] In that case the petition only alleged indebtedness generally, without stating the grounds of the indebtedness. In this case the facts constituting the plaintiff’s claim are fully stated, these facts only are denied by the answer. In the case -of Marley v. Smith, the plaintiff had chosen to risk his case upon a statement of a conclusion from facts; any fact that would show the conclusion untrue was legitimate and proper evidence under such a state of pleadings, but it was not intended to say, nor was it said, that the 'general denial would authorize the proof of payment, in any case, in which the petition set out the facts on which the plaintiff’s claim rested. The judgment of the court below reversed.

All the justices concurring.