Ewing v. General Motors Corp.

236 N.W.2d 200, 70 Wis. 2d 962, 1975 Wisc. LEXIS 1382
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1975
Docket520 (1974)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 236 N.W.2d 200 (Ewing v. General Motors Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ewing v. General Motors Corp., 236 N.W.2d 200, 70 Wis. 2d 962, 1975 Wisc. LEXIS 1382 (Wis. 1975).

Opinion

Wilkie, C. J.

This appeal is from an order overruling a demurrer of the defendants-appellants, Georgia Gault-ney and Sentry Insurance, to a complaint by the plaintiff, Angelo Ewing, in litigation arising out of a single-car accident which occurred near Corinth, Mississippi, on July 19, 1971. The demurrer was entered on the claim that the plaintiff had misjoined several causes of action. We affirm the trial court order overruling the demurrer.

According to the plaintiffs’ pleadings, the accident occurred when a Buick automobile, owned by Julia Ewing and driven by Georgia Gaultney, left the highway and struck an embankment, causing severe injuries to the plaintiffs-passengers, Julia Ewing and her children, Gloria Ewing and Adella Ewing. Georgia Gaultney was operating the car, apparently with Julia Ewing’s permis *965 sion, and was an additional insured under Julia Ewing’s insurance policy with Sentry.

The second amended complaint is a long and complicated pleading. In it the three passengers, all Milwaukee residents, first claimed against the manufacturer, General Motors, in separate theories of strict liability in tort, negligence, and breach of implied warranty. In general the ground of these claims was that an engine mount failure had led to a jamming of the accelerator and loss of steering and braking. The three passengers also sued Aamco Automatic Transmissions, Inc., and a Milwaukee Aamco transmission center, John and Paul, Inc., also in strict liability, negligence, and breach of implied warranty. Here the allegation was that, when the transmission on the car was replaced in 1969, it was improperly attached to the car frame so that, on the date of the accident, it became unseated from the car frame. These three passengers did not sue either Georgia Gaultney or Sentry Insurance, apparently because they had already given releases or otherwise settled their claim with respect to these defendants. Angelo Ewing, the husband of Julia and father of Gloria and Adella, sued General Motors, Aamco, and John and Paul, Inc., under the same three theories of liability, claiming damages due to medical expenses, loss of society and companionship, and as to Julia, loss of consortium. Both Angelo and the three passengers sued General Motors for punitive damages. The final claim in the complaint (and the one which is the source of the demurrer and appeal here) is Angelo Ewing’s allegation that the accident was due to the negligent management and control of the car by Georgia Gaultney, for which he seeks damages for medical expenses and loss of society from Georgia Gaultney and Sentry Insurance.

In their responsive pleadings both General Motors and Aamco asserted as an affirmative defense the negligence of Georgia Gaultney in driving the car. They also pled *966 as an affirmative defense an order approving a settlement, on behalf of a minor, entered by the Milwaukee County Circuit Court in favor of the minor passenger, Adella Ewing, in which it was allegedly determined that Georgia Gaultney’s negligence had been the cause of the accident. Both General Motors and Aamco cross-claimed against Georgia Gaultney and Sentry Insurance for contribution.

Appellants argue that sec. 263.04, Stats., 1 requires that their demurrer be sustained for misjoinder of several causes of action. We disagree.

The threshold question that is raised before the issue of alleged improper joinder is considered is whether Angelo Ewing, in the second amended complaint, has asserted more than one cause of action. In Caygill v. Ipsen 2 we stated that “If there is but a single cause of action stated by the plaintiff, the question of misjoinder does not arise. . . .”

We conclude that, no matter which modern definition of cause of action is employed, Angelo Ewing has only one cause of action, and thus sec. 263.04, interpreted as a statute limiting claims joinder by a single plaintiff, is inapplicable to this case.

According to Rogers v. Oconomowoc, 3 the test of whether there is more than one cause of action is . . whether there is more than one primary right sought to be enforced or one subject of controversy presented for adjudication.” In Rogers an injured swimmer sued the city which owned the beach, the municipal director, and the lifeguard on duty under various theories of liability. *967 This court held that, since there was only one subject of controversy (the accident), and one primary right (the right to be free from tortious invasion of the person), there was only one cause of action stated by the plaintiff, and thus the complaint was not demurrable under sec. 263.04. The same conclusion must be reached here, where there is only one subject of controversy (the accident in Corinth, Mississippi, on July 19, 1971), and one primary right (the right of Angelo Ewing to be free from tortious interference with his family).

Rogers also advanced the “single occurrence” definition of a cause of action 4 which has since become the prevailing definition in Wisconsin. 5 According to this definition, there is only one cause of action if there is only one grouping of facts falling into a single unit or occurrence as a lay person would view them. In this case it is apparent that there has been but one occurrence out of which Angelo Ewing’s right to recovery has arisen, namely, the 1971 accident. Since Angelo Ewing has but one cause of action in this case, it is impossible for him to improperly join several causes of action in violation of sec. 263.04, Stats. The fact that he has in his complaint termed his various theories of recovery “causes of action” is not controlling since this court looks, not to the form of the pleadings, but to the substance of the allegations in determining whether there is more than one cause of action. 6 From these allegations it is clear that, in spite of the various theories of recovery urged against various defendants, Angelo Ewing’s complaint consists of one grouping of facts falling into a single unit and, therefore, pleads but one cause of action.

*968 The joinder of all the parties-defendant here is proper under sec. 260.11, Stats. All of the defendants are alleged joint tort-feasors, the alleged negligent driving of Georgia Gaultney, the alleged defective manufacturing of the automobile by General Motors and Buick, the defective transmission repair by Aamco and John and Paul, Inc., all combined in one time and in one place to cause the accident and to inflict individual injury upon the plaintiffs, Angelo Ewing, his wife Julia, and their daughters Gloria and Adella.

None of the cases cited by appellants require a different result. They all involve consecutive tort-feasors, that is, a situation where joinder is impermissible because each defendant has caused a separate accident, removed in time and. place from another accident. For example, in Cay gill

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Bluebook (online)
236 N.W.2d 200, 70 Wis. 2d 962, 1975 Wisc. LEXIS 1382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-general-motors-corp-wis-1975.