Delahoyde v. Lovelace

49 P.2d 253, 39 N.M. 446
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1935
DocketNo. 4054.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 P.2d 253 (Delahoyde v. Lovelace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delahoyde v. Lovelace, 49 P.2d 253, 39 N.M. 446 (N.M. 1935).

Opinion

BICKLEY, Justice.

Appeal by plaintiff below (appellant) from an order and final judgment dismissing the complaint of plaintiff on the merits.

The action is in malpractice against a practicing physician and surgeon to recover damages alleged to have been sustained through defendant’s gross incompetence and negligence in treating her for an infection of a finger resulting in the total loss of the use of her right atm with total permanent disability to engage in any gainful occupation. The defendant answered with denials of neglect and incompetence; that the plaintiff declined and refused to permit an operation advised by him; and that the serious condition of plaintiff occurred after the defendant had been dismissed from the case.

The cause came on' for trial, a jury being waived. Three days were consumed by plaintiff in presenting her case and the defendant was upon the third day in presenting his evidence, when plaintiff’s counsel orally moved to dismiss her case without prejudice. The defendant objected to a dismissal and simultaneously moved to amend his answer by counterclaiming for compensation for the services referred to in the complaint. The court sustained defendant’s motion to amend and denied plaintiff’s motion to dismiss.

The court had before him for consideration upon the motion to dismiss the whole situation and all the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence during a six-day trial as well as the statements of counsel made upon the motion and the record upon a former case said to be in all respects similar so far as the issues were concerned, the only portion preserved and returned upon this record being the statements by counsel as to facts not contradicted nor disputed, these showing that a former suit on the same claim had been brought and dismissed by the plaintiff after the cause had been set for trial and the defendant had his witnesses and counsel present at large expense ready to proceed with the trial. That some six months later the plaintiff had commenced the present action, the complaint in which was identical with the amended complaint in the former case. The court made an express finding or conclusion: “I have no hesitancy in stating that it would be a case of rank injustice, in my opinion, were I to have sustained the motion for a nonsuit.”

At the outset of the case, the defendant moved that plaintiff be required to file security for costs.. Subsequently plaintiff filed an affidavit that she was too poor to pay the costs (section 105-1311, Comp. St. 1929), which was held by the court to be sufficient to allow her to proceed as a poor person.

A broad statement is made in the text in Standard Encyclopedia of Procedure, vol. 7, p. 656: “The privilege of the plaintiff to dismiss in such actions amounts to an absolute right.”

Appellant contends that such is the law here under the provisions of Comp. St. 1929, § 105-1403, which is as follows: “Any cause pending in any court of this state may be dismissed by the plaintiff in said cause, at his costs, at any time before the same is submitted to the jury in 'causes tried by jury, or before judgment has been rendered in causes tried by the court.”

The text of Corpus Juris, vol. 18, on Dismissal and Nonsuit, § 5, states: “Plaintiff has no absolute right at all times and under all circumstances to discontinue, dismiss, or take a nonsuit, but such right is often dependent upon the effect it has upon'the rights of defendant, * * * and the granting of leave to do so is often held to rest within the discretion of the court.”

Counsel for both parties cite the decision of this court in Andrews v. French, 17 N. M. 615, 131 P. 996, as aligning the courts of this jurisdiction with the respective views above mentioned. We think it was not a decision holding that the plaintiff has an absolute right to dismiss his cause. The second syllabus is as follows: “While such dismissal must be by order of the court, and the court has a discretionary control over its orders and decrees, if no facts appear which show that stich dismissal will violate any of the rights or interests of the adverse party, a refusal of leave becomes merely arbitrary and without any basis upon which discretion can rest.”

The court said: “The language is very broad and includes all cases. The right to dismiss, however, is, of course, dependent upon whether such dismissal will leave the defendant in the same position as he would have stood if the suit had not been instituted; he would not have the right where there has been a proceeding in the cause which has given the defendant a right against the plaintiff, or an injustice would be done the defendant by the dismissal.”

The difficulty arises in determining what is meant in the rule stated: “Or an injustice would be done the defendant by the dismissal.” The hardship on defendant consisting of the mere possibility of future litigation is usually held not to be such an injustice to the defendant as will prevent a dismissal by the plaintiff. Such hardship is supposed to be taken care of by recovery of his costs. Such injustice is usually regarded as present only where dismissal would jeopardize a defense presently available, involving the loss of substantial rights acquired during the proceedings, or depriving defendant of a right to affirmative relief. Appellee is able to cite one case, A. C. Gilbert Co. v. United Electrical Mfg. Co., 33 F.(2d) 760 (D. C. E. D. Mich. 1929), which, though lacking the grounds usually mentioned as preventing a dismissal, points out that a right had been acquired and the' prejudice threatened arose, not from steps taken by the defendant in the course of the suit, of the benefits of which a dismissal would deprive him, but solely from the acts of the plaintiff extrinsic to the proceedings. The damage to defendant’s business reputation was said to be as substantail a prejudice as the loss of evidence collected for a specific trial and was thought an ample justification for the court’s action. In that case, plaintiff brought suit in equity against defendant for infringement of electrical patents, and sent circular letters to the trade, including defendant’s customers, informing them of the suit. After defendant had filed his answer denying infringement, pi a in - tiff moved to dismiss its bill without prejudice because of defendant’s intervention in a suit on the same patent brought against a customer of defendant in the district where defendánt had its principal place of business. It was held that it would be inequitable and prejudicial to defendant to permit plaintiff to discontinue without prejudice a suit which it had so advertised. This decision loses some force as a precedent to support appellee’s view, because of the difference in the facts in the case cited and in the case at bar. In the case before us, the only charge against the defendant of wrongdoing is that appearing in the plaintiff’s complaint, and which is the very basis of her cause of action and whatever effect these allegations might have upon the defendant’s reputation as a physician would be inevitably incident to the statement of plaintiff’s cause of action. In the opinion in the A. C. Gilbert Co. Case, supra, the court put a good deal of stress on the fact that the prejudice threatened to defendant arose not merely from the pleadings, but from the acts of the plaintiff extrinsic to the proceedings, such as advertising the defendant as an infringer of patents.

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49 P.2d 253, 39 N.M. 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delahoyde-v-lovelace-nm-1935.