Carolina Hardware Co. v. Raleigh Banking & Trust Co.

86 S.E. 706, 169 N.C. 744, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 86 S.E. 706 (Carolina Hardware Co. v. Raleigh Banking & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carolina Hardware Co. v. Raleigh Banking & Trust Co., 86 S.E. 706, 169 N.C. 744, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 303 (N.C. 1915).

Opinion

BhowN, J.

These several actions, which have been consolidated and tried as one action, were brought to secure and enforce a lien for material furnished and used in the construction of the banking house of the defendant the Ealeigh Banking and Trust Company, in the city of Ealeigh, and to collect the sums due each of said plaintiffs therefor from said trust company.

*746 Due notice, according to the statute, was given to withhold the sums claimed from the contract price for the construction of the building.

In his first report the referee finds that the trust company had overpaid the contractors, over and above the amount due them on the contract price by $25,423, six months prior to the filing of plaintiffs’ liens, and concludes, as matter of law, that the said trust company is not indebted to the plaintiffs in any sum, and that they are not entitled to any lien on the bank building for the materials furnished to J. B. Carr & Co., the contractors.

Upon the coming in this report two of the plaintiffs were allowed to amend their complaints by adding the following amendment:

“That the contract alleged in the next preceding paragraph was, in accordance with its terms, to have been completed in August, 1912, and that the trust company and its contractor, finding that a large part of the contract had not been performed by the contractor, according to its terms, then entered into a new contract with the defendant contractor wherein it was agreed that the said contractor should perform his original contract, with the provision that the defendant trust company would pay for the material, labor, etc., to be then purchased by the said contractor and necessary for the completion of the said building. The building was completed in August, 1913, and accepted by the defendant trust company.”

The cause was rereferred and the referee reported his findings of fact and conclusions of law, holding the said trust company not liable for the plaintiffs’ demands. To this conclusion of law the plaintiffs excepted. The judge sustained the exception, and upon the findings of fact, as made by the referee, adjudged that the said trust company is liable to plaintiffs, and rendered judgment accordingly.

The defendant first excepts to the order of the court allowing the amendments to the complaint, on the ground that the defendant had no notice of the motion to amend. It appears that the motion was made at the regular term of the court by the plaintiffs the hardware company and Young & Hughes, and was granted without notice to the defendant. It is well settled that no notice of a motion is required to be given to the adversary party when the motion is made at a term when the cause stands for trial. Parties to actions are supposed to take notice of any motion that may he made in a cause when it is made during the terms of the court. Hemphill v. Moore, 104 N. C., 379; Erwin v. Lowry, 64 N. C., 321; Stith v. Jones, 119 N. C., 428.

The defendant contends, in the second place, that the amendment introduced into the proceeding a new and distinct cause of action from the one stated in the original complaint. It is well settled that the court cannot, except by consent, allow an amendment which changes *747 tbe pleadings so as to make substantially a new action, but it is also settled tbat an amendment which only adds to the original cause of action is not of this nature and may be allowed in'the sound discretion of the trial judge. Ely v. Early, 94 N. C., 1; Craven v. Russell, 118 N. C., 564.

We do not think that the effect of the amendment in any way changed or added to the original cause of action. The gravamen of the original complaint is to the effect that the defendant, the trust company, is indebted to the plaintiff for material and supplies furnished in erecting its building. The plaintiffs first proceeded to acquire a lien upon the building for the material furnished under the statute. The plaintiffs failed in this because it turned out, as represented by the referee, that the defendant owed the contractor nothing. But upon that investigation it turned out, and was so reported by the referee, that the contractor had failed in his contract, practically, and in order to complete the building the defendant agreed in August, 1912, to pay for such supplies' and material as was necessary to finish it. This does not create a new cause of action. It simply gave the plaintiffs another legal ground for the collection of the same demand.

Upon this principle it was decided that where a complaint alleges-that the defendant had converted, wrongfully, money belonging to the plaintiff, thereby setting up a tort, an amendment alleging that the defendant had received the money as trustee, and thereby changing somewhat the character of the action, was allowable in the discretion of the court, as it neither asserted a cause of action, wholly different from that set out in the original complaint, nor changed the subject-matter of the action, nor deprived the defendant of any defenses which he would have had to a new action. Parker v. Harden, 122 N. C., 111.

The defendant further objects to the said order of amendment, because it was made after the referee had made his second report. It appears that the amendments to the complaint of Young & Hughes and the hardware company were allowed before the cause was heard the second time by the referee, but after the order of consolidation. When the' cause was reported by the referee the second time and heard by Judge Daniels, he ordered that all the plaintiffs be allowed to amend their complaints so as to allege the agreements made in August, 1912.

The policy of Code procedure as to the allowance of amendments is very liberal, the leading purpose being to have actions tried upon their merits and avert a failure of justice. Therefore, amendments to the pleadings are allowed, not only before trial, but even after judgment, and when the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defense, it may be allowed after the verdict or after report of the referee, so as to conform the pleadings to the facts proved.

*748 Our statute provides tbat the judge or court may, before and after judgment, in furtherance of justice and on such terms as may be proper, allow amendments to the pleadings or process. Rev., sec. 509; Blalock v. Clark, 133 N. C., 309; Simpson v. Lumber Co., 133 N. C., 99.

The only other assignment of error we deem it necessary to consider goes to the very heart of the.controversy: that the court erred in finding as a fact that the defendant trust company ascertained in August, 1912, that its contractor was insolvent, and that the said defendant agreed with its contractors, Carr & Co., that the trust company would pay for all materials and labor thereafter required to complete said building in accordance with the plans and specifications.

His Honor, in his judgment, found the following facts:

“That in August, 1912, the defendant bank, through its president, Charles E.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.E. 706, 169 N.C. 744, 1915 N.C. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolina-hardware-co-v-raleigh-banking-trust-co-nc-1915.