Armstrong v. Lough

277 P. 51, 128 Kan. 167, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 4, 1929
DocketNo. 28,468
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 277 P. 51 (Armstrong v. Lough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Lough, 277 P. 51, 128 Kan. 167, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 283 (kan 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The question in this appeal is the sufficiency of an oft-amended petition which succumbed before, defendants’ motions to strike and the order of court dismissing the action with prejudice.

[168]*168The action was begun on December 17, 1925, when plaintiff filed his first petition, in which he set up a claim for $3,335.29 for services as attorney for a partnership comprised of defendants, which professional services covered a period of several years up to June 30, 1923. He also alleged that on January 31, 1925, his stated account for these services had been accepted on behalf of defendants by one of their number, J. W. Lough.

This petition was subjected to a motion to make more definite and certain, and without awaiting a ruling thereon plaintiff, on February 3,1926, with leave of court filed an amended petition setting up the facts alleged in his first petition and adding an allegation touching a contract of dissolution of the defendant partners, dated June 20, 1923, whereby J. W. Lough undertook to conduct the partnership business until it could be wound up and its debts paid. To that first amended petition defendants filed a demurrer, which was not ruled on, and on August 13,1926, by leave of court, plaintiff filed a second amended petition in which he again pleaded his employment as attorney for defendants and his services thereunder from January 1, 1921, to June 20, 1923, and set up his claim for compensation therefor. To this second amended petition plaintiff attached an itemized statement of account which roughly approximated the amount prayed for in this and the two preceding petitions. This petition, however, did not mention the account stated which had been pleaded in both prior petitions.

To this second amended petition separate demurrers were lodged by two groups of defendants, the grounds therefor being that it did not state a cause of action, and showed on its face that plaintiff’s claim was barred by the statute of limitations.

Again, without awaiting a formal ruling on these demurrers, on November 13, 1926, plaintiff filed a third amended petition which differed in no substantial particular from the facts pleaded in the original petition and in the first amended petition. It narrated plaintiff’s employment and services as attorney for defendants up to June 20,1923, the statement and acceptance of his account by J. W. Lough on behalf of defendants on January 31, 1925, and pleaded the contract between the defendant partners which pertained to the winding up of the business and the payment of its debts by J. W. Lough as liquidating partner.

This third amended petition was subjected to separate motions [169]*169to strike on various grounds — that it was frivolous, a mere repetition of the first amended petition already “held defective on demurrer,” and a departure from the first and all succeeding petitions filed prior to June 20,1926.

These motions were sustained on April 4,1927, but leave was given plaintiff to file instanter his fourth amended petition, which once more alleged the facts of plaintiff’s employment and services as attorney prior to and down to June 20, 1923, and defendants’ indebtedness to plaintiff thereunder as shown by an itemized account attached to the petition. In this petition a second count was formulated purporting to be founded on the same claim for attorney’s services, and which set up the contract of the defendant partners whereby J. W. Lough was to serve as liquidating partner, and pleading the statement and acceptance of plaintiff’s account by J. W. Lough on defendants’ behalf.

To this fourth amended petition some of the defendants filed a motion to strike on the ground of departure. Others filed a motion pleading departure, repetition of earlier pleadings abandoned by plaintiff, and repetition of the first amended petition “held bad on demurrer.”

The trial court sustained these motions, dismissed the action with prejudice and entered final judgment accordingly. Hence this' appeal.

Before considering the propriety of the judgment on its merits it is needful to settle a dispute which has arisen in this court between counsel touching the disposition in the trial court of defendants’ demurrer to plaintiff’s first amended petition. According to plaintiff’s abstract that demurrer was not passed on, and plaintiff was permitted either expressly or without objection to file a second amended petition. In that situation, it serves no purpose for counsel for defendants to volunteer a statement to the contrary. It was their duty to supplement the abstract with something of record, even if that had to be provided by court order nunc pro tunc, to show that the trial court had sustained the demurrer to the first amended petition. (Rules of the Supreme Court, No. 5; Platts v. Thompson, 126 Kan. 544, 549, 268 Pac. 833, and citations.) Failing that, this court must accept the record submitted by plaintiff as correct. However, this matter is of little consequence unless there was a substantial departure between the first and last petitions filed herein [170]*170which might be affected by the statute of limitations or by the time allowable for appellate review.

What about this question of departure? The proper answer will be discovered by a careful examination of the nature of plaintiff’s claim. Against a plea of departure or variance under our liberal civil code the precaution of prime importance in the amending of pleadings is that the cause of action or defense be not materially changed. (R. S. 60-759; Bogle v. Gordon, 39 Kan. 31, 17 Pac. 857; Culp v. Steere, 47 Kan. 746, 750, 751, 28 Pac. 987; Grand Lodge v. Troutman, 73 Kan. 35, 37, 84 Pac. 567; Kibby v. Kernel, 81 Kan. 229, 231, 105 Pac. 696; Taylor v. Railway Co., 81 Kan. 232, 68 Pac. 691.) In the original petition plaintiff’s claim was one for services as an attorney, with the additional allegation that his claim therefor had been simplified and settled by an account stated. Defendants did not like the issue thus tendered and lodged motions against that petition. In an effort to formulate an issue upon which they might be willing to join, plaintiff, as was his privilege, filed an amended petition. It continued to plead his claim as one for attorney’s services. In none of the suceeeding amended petitions did it ever cease to do so. Ordinarily a question of departure in a plaintiff’s pleadings only arises when there is a seeming inconsistency between the petition and reply, but the really important fault of departure arises where there is a palpable inconsistency between the earlier and later pleadings of a litigant which prevents his adversary from squarely joining issues with him on material matters, and which, if countenanced by the court, would substantially change the action or defense from what it had been at its inception. (Johnson v. Bank, 59 Kan. 250, 52 Pac. 860; Surety Co. v. Bragg, 63 Kan. 291, 65 Pac. 272; Sturgeon v. Culver, 87 Kan. 404, 124 Pac. 419.)

In Hunter v. Allen, 74 Kan. 679, 685, 88 Pac. 252, it was said:

“New matter in the reply which the plaintiff is forced to plead in order to-meet the allegations of the answer will not constitute departure if it does not contradict the facts stated in the petition and if it is not adopted as a new basis for relief in place of the cause of action presented by the petition.”' (Syl.)

In Minter v. Shearer, 117 Kan.

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

Related

Taylor v. Hostetler
352 P.2d 1042 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1960)
Alexander v. Smith
229 P.2d 1022 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1951)
Dalton v. Hill
219 P.2d 710 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1950)
Deinlein v. Pace
186 P.2d 231 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1947)
Federal Savings & Loan Insurance v. Strangers' Rest Baptist Church
131 P.2d 654 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1942)
Lawrence Building & Loan Ass'n v. Taylor
81 P.2d 15 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1938)
Docking v. Sharp
286 P. 197 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 P. 51, 128 Kan. 167, 1929 Kan. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-lough-kan-1929.