Aetna Ins. Co. v. Commander

153 So. 877, 169 Miss. 847, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 80
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1934
DocketNo. 31088.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 153 So. 877 (Aetna Ins. Co. v. Commander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Ins. Co. v. Commander, 153 So. 877, 169 Miss. 847, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 80 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees sued the appellant, by a declaration consisting of but one count, on two fire insurance policies both of which covered the same dwelling house and oné of which covered, in addition, the household and kitchen *850 furniture situated therein. The appellant demurred to this declaration and assigned as cause therefor that it “is insufficient in law because of a misjoinder of causes of action, in that two separate and distinct causes of action are joined and united therein in one and the same count. ’ ’ This demurrer was overruled, and the appellant declining to plead further final judgment was rendered against it. The only assignment of error is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer.

We are not confronted with a misjoinder of causes of action, in which connection see Hazlehurst v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co., 83 Miss. 303, 35 So. 951, and Shipman’s Common Law Pleading (2 Ed.) p. 376, for the two causes of action here sued on could unquestionably be included in the same declaration by separate counts for each. The defect in the declaration is— that it includes both causes of action in a single count, thereby violating the • common-law rule against duplicity in pleading. The question for decision then is — Can a pleading which violates" the rule against duplicity be objected to by a special demurrer?

Demurrers, both general and special, have been governed by statute, and not- by common law, in England since the enactment of 27 Eliz. Chap. 5, brought forward into 4 Anne, chap. 116, which provided, in substance, “that judgment should be given according to ‘the very right of the cause, ’ without regard to imperfection, omissions, defects, or wants of form, except such as the party demurring should specifically assign as causes of demurrer, and with the further provision that sufficient matter must appear in the pleadings upon which judgment according to such right could be rendered. Since these statutes, therefore, objections of form are to be reached only by special demurrer, and the objections must be specifically stated.”' Shipman Op. Cit., p. 262. They have been so governed in this state since its organization as a territory,' when the’ English statute was brought forward, in substance, by the territorial Legis *851 lature in an “Act establishing superior courts and declaring the powers of the territorial judges,” Toulmin’s Digest of the statutes of the Mississippi territory, page 119, re-enacted by the state Legislature in 1822 in a circuit court act, section 64 of which reads: “When a demurrer shall be joined in any action, the court shall not regard any other defect or imperfection in the writ, return, declaration or pleadings, than what shall be specially alleged in the demurrer, or causes thereof, unless something so essential to the action or defense, as that judgment according to law, and the very right of the cause cannot be given, shall be omitted.” Hutchinson’s Mississippi Code 1798-1848, page 875. This statute was brought forward in all of our subsequent codes; in that of Revised Code 1857 as article 108 of chapter 61, page 495; of Revised Code 1871 in article 6 of chapter 8 as section 611; of Revised Code 1880 as section 1560; of Annotated Code 1892 as section 696; of Code 1906 as section 754; and of Code 1930 as section 546. In 1878 this statute was amended by chapter 67, page 190, of the laws of that year, which provided :

“That article 6, of chapter 8, of the Revised Code of 1871, in relation to pleading and practice, be and the same is hereby so amended that no pleading shall be deemed insufficient for any defect which could heretofore be objected to only by special demurrer.”

The effect of this amending statute was to write out of section 611, Revised Code 1871, the permission there given to object to a pleading for insufficiency not predicated on the omission therefrom of “something so essential to the action or defense, as that judgment accord-. ing to law, and the very right of the cause cannot be given.” ín other words, a demurrer of any kind thereafter would lie only for matters of substance and not of form. A plaintiff or defendant was not thereby r.en-' dered remediless for insufficient pleading by his adversary, provided the insufficiency was such as to embarrass or prejudice him in the trial of the case, for *852 section 618, Revised Code 1871, provided that: “When the allegations of a pleading are so indefinite or uncertain, that the precise nature of the charge or defense is not apparent, or if any pleading shall be so framed as to prejudice, embarrass, or delay the fair trial of the action, the court, on application of the opposite party, shall cause the same to be made definite and certain, or may strike out or amend the same.”

In 1880, chapter 67, Laws of 1878, sections 611 and 618, Revised Code 1871, were all brought forward in the code of that year, appearing therein as sections 1567, 1560, and 1568. Sections 1560 and 1567 are in conflict, and the second section, if it was to be given any application at all, wrote out of section 1560, the same provision thereof that chapter 67, Laws of 1878, wrote out of its predecessor in the Revised Code of 1871. It would seem that the two sections of the Code should be given the same construction and effect they theretofore had, particularly as section 1567 appears in the Revised Code of 1880 subsequent to section 1560 thereof. This was evidently the construction put on them by this court in Sims v. Eiland, 57 Miss. 83, decided under chapter 67, Laws of 1878, and in State v. Swinney, 60 Miss. 39, 45 Am. Rep. 405, decided less than two years after the Revised Code of 1880 became effective, and in which the opinions were written by that great jurist, Judge J. A. P. Campbell, who was the commissioner who prepared the Revised Code of 1880 for submission to the Legislature. In the second of these cases the court expressly held that matters of substance only in a pleading and not of form render it insufficient on demurrer. In other words, that the only defect in a pleading rendering it insufficient on demurrer is that it fails to state a cause of action or defense. Duplicity in pleading has always been considered not a defect of substance but of form, that is, of the manner or form in which the cause of action or defense is stated. Shipman Op. Cit., p. 375. This court expressly so held in Mobley v. Keys, 13 *853 Smedes & M. 677. Section 1567, Revised Code of 1880, was several times re-enacted after the decisions herein-before referred to were rendered, for it was brought forward in the three subsequent codes, and now appears in the Code of 1930 as section 553. The statute was applied to matters of form in Polkinghorne v. Hendricks, 61 Miss. 366, and Wilmot v. Y. & M. V. R. R. Co., 76 Miss. 374, 24 So. 701.

One of the common-law rules is that “whatever is alleged in a pleading must be stated with certainty,” a violation of which was subject to a special demurrer. This rule was brought forward, with its scope somewhat-restricted, in the statute which now appears as section 521, Code 1930. When Jones v. Millsaps, 71 Miss. 10, 14 So. 440, 23 L. R. A. 155, was decided, this statute appeared as section 671, Annotated Code 1892.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Taylor v. State
122 So. 3d 707 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2013)
Carlos Taylor v. State of Mississippi
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2009
Nofsinger v. Irby
961 So. 2d 778 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2007)
Reed v. State
523 So. 2d 62 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1988)
State, Department of Transportation v. Manning
288 So. 2d 289 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1974)
Frierson v. Mississippi Road Supply Co.
75 So. 2d 70 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1954)
Watson v. Broadhead
33 So. 2d 302 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 So. 877, 169 Miss. 847, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-ins-co-v-commander-miss-1934.