Aleshire v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad

25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 215

This text of 25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 215 (Aleshire v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aleshire v. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad, 25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 215 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

The submission is upon a motion to the amended answer of the defendant. The present answer contains some of the matter which the court specifically ruled should be stricken out, and a number of other objections are made, which will be taken up in the order in which they appear.

In the first defense the defendant—

“Denies that on the 4th day of January, 1922, the plaintiff in obedience to his instructions attempted to go around the rear end of the engine which was being repaired, when he was injured; that it was necessary for the plaintiff to go around said engine to unhook any springs;”

The allegation of the petition which defendant undertakes to deny reads,

“Attempted to go around the rear of one of the engines which was being repaired # * that it was necessary for plaintiff to go around said engine to unhook certain steel springs which were being brought forward, etc.”

Consider the form of denial of the above quoted allegation, and recall the allusions made by text writers to a vice peculiar to certain forms of traverses — to such forms of. negatives as imply an affirmative, known as the Negative Pregnant. This irregular form will not be found in a correct type of code general denial — which we do not always find in pleading — because vices which have crept into the Code practice, just as they did in the common law which we studied in earlier days.

A negative pregnant is a form of special denial which is pregnant with an irregular, erroneous form of denial, which contains an admission, by implication. This imperfect traverse is often encountered where one is called on to answer an alie[217]*217gation of several facts connected by the copulative conjunction, where the pleader answers or replies denying them in haec verbis, which admits that some of the facts may be true. There is in such ease no denial of any one fact, it being, instead, a denial of the whole as connected or happening together.

The form of denial may seem to be harmless and non-prejudicial; it evidently is so regarded, as it is frequently used. What is deemed worthy of denying at all would seem to deserve a legal denial. See Bliss PL Sec. 332.

“The only pleas authorized by the Code to be used by a defendant are the general or specific denials, and the plea if new matter.” Converse v. Motors Co., 21 N. P. (N.S.), 345.

No one will question this; then why pursue an improper course, and seek to justify it, when a little thought will lead one in the right direction. ,

The 'desire is to keep within the spirit and letter of the code, and not wander away from it so that the system will he brought into disrepute as was the common law. It seems not difficult for the draughtsman to place himself in the position of the court thus taking -into consideration the judicial point of view, and especially the duty and function of stating the issues to the jury, which must be done by resort to the pleadings. Then the judiciary must go over hundred’s of pleadings, and the duty of properly stating the issues in jury trials is of the highest importance. In the majority of cases the court can best perform this function, not by reading the pleadings, 'but by reducing them into simpler and more concise, definite form. But counsel may not appreciate the task of considering the great number of pleadings — and more especially the constant departures from correct practice which has a tendency to bring out system into disrepute somewhat like the older practice.

The language sought to be stricken from the amended answer is the same matter which the court of its own motion prdered stricken out. There can be no doubt of the power of [218]*218the court, and there is no impropriety in such a course, where the purpose is to secure compliance with the code thereby securing an efficient administration ’ of the law.

The language sought to be stricken from the amended answer is the same matter ordered to be taken out of the pleading by the court on its own motion, but which was not complied with. It begins with the words “The defendant admits” on the second page, and ends with the words “not herein denied,” and is mere repetition of the allegations contained in plaintiff’s petition. It is a form of denial not in compliance with the rule of the code, which runs counter to the rule against negative pregnant. The court has power to strike matter from a pleading although sometimes such an order is ignored.

The rule requires the facts to be stated without repetition, and this—

“Applies to pleadings of both parties, and forbids the repetition of facts alleged in a petition by allegations of admissions thereof by defendant. Such repetition of facts also violates the rule which requires facts to be stated in ordinary and concise language, which contemplates this shall be done in the established order and methodically.”

“Ordinary language is the use of such English words as are used in strict requirement of the rules required by the Code. Compliance with the rule of ordinary language requires that the facts shall be stated in concise and condensed form, and forbids useless repetition by methods not authorized.” Converse v. Panhard Motors Co., 21 N. P. (N.S.), 345.

There is a page of repetition of admitted allegations in the pleading, whereas the only means prescribed by the code to be used by the defendant is the general and specific denials, or the statements of new matter by answer as a defense, counterclaim or set off.

The specific provision of the Code (Section 11314), is that the answer shall only contain a general or specific denial of each material allegation of the petition controverted by defendant, or a statement of new matter constituting a defense, counterclaim or set-off.

[219]*219It is then entirely clear that the specific modes thus exclusively provided by the code mandatorily forbid encumbering the record with useless repetition of matters not denied specifically or generally.

The pleader should be so scrupulously certain that every allegation by the adversary has been specifically denied, precisely in the manner prescribed by the code so there can not be any doubt whatever concerning the issues. It is better to follow the letter and spirit of the code than to persist in following a course wholly contrary to the rules prescribed and to repeatedly disregard the familiar and well settled rules of practice.

Counsel quote from Phillips Code Pleading Sec. 233 where it is stated that:

“It is common-practice to admit certain allegations of the complaint, and to deny all allegations therein not expressly admitted, etc.”

No one understands this better than the Bench and Bar; no one knows how judicial interference with this “mongrel” illegal practice on the part of the Bench is looked upon by some members of the profession when efforts are made to rescue the code from constant infractions. This is not our first experience, there is a right and a wrong way, and few there are who pursue the right course.

Returning to the quotation from Phillips brought to our attention by defendants counsel, it is further stated:

‘4 This general denial of only a part of the allegations of- the complaint combined with an admission as to others, has been criticized as 4a mongrel form of answer’ not contemplated by the reform system and not in harmony with its true theory.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aleshire-v-pittsburgh-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-railroad-ohctcomplfrankl-1923.