Bouchard v. Jacques

370 A.2d 680, 1977 Me. LEXIS 448
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 11, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 370 A.2d 680 (Bouchard v. Jacques) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bouchard v. Jacques, 370 A.2d 680, 1977 Me. LEXIS 448 (Me. 1977).

Opinion

DELAHANTY, Justice.

Plaintiff Joseph Bouchard instituted a civil action in the Superior Court (York County) against his son-in-law Lucien Jacques. On December 4, 1975 a jury found for plaintiff in the amount of $10,000.00. Defendant appeals from the judgment as well as from the denial of the defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

We sustain the appeal.

The jury could reasonably have found the following facts: In 1966 Jacques and his wife Ruth (plaintiff’s daughter) planned to build a house on Sunset Avenue in Biddeford. The parties orally agreed that the house would include an apartment for Bouchard and his wife, although the premises were to remain exclusively in the Jacques name. Plaintiff contributed $10,000.00, which both parties understood to represent the cost of building the apartment annex. Construction was completed in 1967, shortly after the death of Bou-chard’s wife.

Plaintiff moved into the apartment in June 1967, and he resided there until February 1968 when he was hospitalized for five weeks. Upon discharge from the hospital, he lived with his daughter Paulette until 1969 when he went to Florida for three months. He subsequently returned to the Sunset Avenue apartment where he resided for about one year. He then was hospitalized once again, and upon release he returned to Paulette’s residence where he has continued to live up to the date of the trial. In 1970 he moved his furniture out of the apartment, and it stood vacant until 1973 when it was rented by defendant.

Plaintiff commenced this action in 1973. The original complaint for money lent was amended to include a breach of contract claim that defendant and his wife 1 had agreed to care and provide for plaintiff and his wife during their lifetimes as consideration for plaintiff’s agreement to assume the expenses of building and maintaining the apartment annex, the “said apartment to be given to defendant upon the death of plaintiff and his wife.” Bou-chard claims that he has fulfilled his portion of the contract by payment of $10,000.00 for construction and $1,626.00 for maintenance. Defendant contended at the trial that no such agreement to provide support was ever reached, and that the funds expended for construction of the apartment were in the nature of a gift to defendant. On appeal, defendant asserts several points as error. We consider only the first ground since it is sufficient to require a new trial.

*682 At the close of all of the evidence, the court sua sponte advised the parties of its intention to amend the pleadings to conform to the evidence. M.R.Civ.P. 15(b). 2 The trial Justice, treating the issue as having been tried by implied consent, added a “no meeting of the minds” theory. 3 Defendant promptly objected to the court’s insertion of this issue and moved for a continuance on the ground of “surprise,” translated in his brief to “prejudice.” The court granted defendant’s motion and offered to reschedule the matter for trial de novo. However, defendant then declined the court’s offer and chose instead to submit the case to the jury over his objection.

We test defendant’s claim of prejudice by examining “whether he had a fair opportunity to defend and whether he could offer any additional evidence if the case were to be retried on a different theory.” deHaas v. Empire Petroleum Co., 435 F.2d 1223, 1229 (10th Cir. 1970) quoting 3 J. Moore, Moore’s Federal Practice § 15.-13(2), at 993 (2d ed. 1974). We recently said in Blue Spruce Co. v. Parent, Me., 365 A.2d 797, 802 (1976) :

[t]he mere fact that evidence presented at trial which is competent and relevant to the issues raised by the pleadings may incidentally tend to prove another fact not put in issue does not give rise to the application of Rule 15(b) and support a claim that the issue was tried by consent, unless notice of the nonpleaded issue is given clearly during the course of the trial, (emphasis added).

Applying the above tests to this case, we conclude that defendant would certainly have offered different evidence and attempted a different defense if the case were tried under the amended theory which allowed plaintiff to recover upon a jury finding of no meeting of the minds. Defendant had neither sufficient notice of the new issue nor ample opportunity to present a proper defense to it. Rather than serving to conform the pleadings to the proof, the court’s amendment instead “inject[ed] a new and different issue as to which different and additional' evidence would be relevant.” Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Newman, 243 F.2d 804, 812-13 (6th Cir. 1957). The facts of this case fit within neither the letter nor the spirit of Rule 15(b).

We recognize, in spite of defendant’s assertion to the contrary in his brief to this *683 Court 4 , that the issue of the existence of a contract was embraced in the case to some extent. It is apparent from the pre-trial memoranda of both parties, and the pretrial order which incorporated those memo-randa, that such was indeed an issue. The surprise and prejudice arise, however, not from the issue itself, but from the new theory of recovery under this issue which was injected by the trial Justice. Plaintiff’s attorney, throughout the course of trial, was quite obviously attempting to prove that the parties had entered into a contract or “meeting of the minds” which was breached by defendant when he failed to provide care and support for his father-in-law. The trial record nowhere reveals the slightest indication that plaintiff was attempting to prove the lack of a contract. The defense, on the other hand, was just as clearly directed towards proving that no contract had been entered into, but that the money which was transferred to defendant was in the nature of a gift with no strings attached. To set up a situation whereby the jury, should it accept the defense of no contract, is forced to find not for defendant but for plaintiff, is indeed to interpose a new and different theory requiring a new and different defense from that which Jacques had presented. Such a theory was nowhere delineated in the pleadings and unquestionably came as a surprise to defendant (and probably to plaintiff as well) who was thus unprepared to meet it.

Plaintiff argues that even if one were to accept the assertion of unfair surprise, the court obviated any resulting prejudice when it granted a continuance and offered to reschedule the matter for a new trial. We do not agree.

There are two types of amendment to conform to the proof which are authorized under Rule 15(b).

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Bluebook (online)
370 A.2d 680, 1977 Me. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bouchard-v-jacques-me-1977.