Gage v. Melton

1 Ark. 224
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Ark. 224 (Gage v. Melton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gage v. Melton, 1 Ark. 224 (Ark. 1838).

Opinion

Ringo, Chief Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action of debt commenced by the appellant against the appellee, in the Carroll Circuit Court. The cause of action as described and.set forth in the declaration and pleadings, is a promissory note in writing, executed by Me-lton, and made payable directly to Gage.

To this action Melton filed two pleas in bar, which the court, on the plaintiff’s motion, directed to be treated as a nullity, and granted to the defendant leave to plead. Whereupon he filed two other pleas in bar: First, “that the said plaintiff gave no consideration in law for the said promissory note in writing, to wit, on the 12th day of October, 1835.” Second “that the consideration for which the said promissory note in writing, and the promise therein contained, were made and executed, has totally failed.”

To these pleas the plaintiff demurred severally, and his demurrers being joined, were, after argument, overruled by the court. The plaintiff" then replied severally to said pleas: To the first “thathe did give a consideration in law for the said note sued on.” And to the second, “that the consideration for which the said promissory note was given, and the promises thereiu contained, did not totally fail, on the 12th day of October, 1835;” and concluded by tendering an issue to the country, which was joined by the defendant, when, by consent of the parties, the cause was submitted to the court upon the issues joined. And the court after hearing the evidence and arguments of counsel, found upon the issues joined, in favor of the defendant, and thereupon entered up a final judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff prayed an appeal, which was granted, and has been duly prosecuted in this court.

On the trial, a bill of execeptions was taken by the plaintiff, setting forth all of the evidence in the cause, which, being signed and sealed by the court, was made a part of the record.

The appellant assigns for error, first, that the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the second plea. Second, that the court erred in overruling his demurrer to the first plea of the defendant as lastly pleaded. Third, that the court erred in receiving the proof offered by the defendant as evidence of the issue joined. Fourth, that the court erred in deciding the evidence sufficient to sustain the issues joined, when, in truth there was no sufficient evidence to sustain said issues. Fifth, that the judgment is for the defendant; whereas, by the law of the land, it ought to have been for the plaintiff.

As to the questions sought to be raised by the first and second assignments of error, the authorities are full and conclusive, that when a party amends his'pleadings or pleads over after judgment against him on demurrer, the demurrer and decision thereon are as completely superseded as if the demurrer had never been filed. Crozier vs. Gano and wife, 1 Bibb 257; Peate vs. Craig 1 Bibb, 329; Violett vs. Dale, 1 Bibb 144; Hancock vs. Vatwer, Hardin, 513; Patrick vs. Conrad &c. Littell's Selected Cases, 508.

In the courts of England, a party was never permitted to amend his pleading, or plead over after a demurrer, without the leave of the court, and when the demurrer was overruled, such leave was never granted, until it was by leave of the court, formally withdrawn.—2 Tidd, 766, 767.

And although in the loose and liberal practice indulged in, in some of the courts in the United States, amendments and other pleadings have been received, after demurrer, without any formal order for leave to withdraw it; yet the simple fact of amending or pleading over, has in such cases, been generally held to be equivalent thereto, and' the parties subjected to the like consequences.

To permit a party to avail himself of the advantages of an issue at law, and an issue oí fact, to the same pleading at one and the same ^me’ or suffer him to return lo and revive the questions decided on demurrer, after he had acquiesced in the decision thereof, and volun- , tarily proceeded to a trial of the issues of fact, would be to con-1 found and unsettle the most -plain and salutary, and best established rules of practice, without the sanction of law, or the support of reason.

We are, therefore, of the opinion that a party, when he has amended his pleading demurred to, or pleaded over after his demurrer overruled, cannot again return to and revive the questions decided upon the demurrer, and that in such cases the demurrer and the decision thereon are as completely superseded as if the demurrer had never been filed. Tested by this rule, the first and second assignments of error present no question upon the record, of which the appellant can now avail himself.- The validity of the pleas cannot, therefore, in the present aspect of the case, be questioned.

The third assignment is equally unauthorized; for it does not appear by the record, that the evidence received by the court was objected to in the court below. It must therefore be considered as having been received by the court, with the consent of the plaintiff, whose duty it was to have objected, if he considered it incompetent, irrelevant, or illegal. Having failed to do so, his objection in this court, now made for the first time, comes entirely too late to be regarded.

The fourth and fifth assignments of error, question the decision of the court, that the evidence adduced was sufficient to sustain the issues joined, and the judgment thereupon given in favor of the defendant. The latter .depends upon the former, and both may be well considered together. ,

The pleas of the defendant were affirmative, and from the character of the issues joined, the burthen of proof devolved upon him; to support the issues on his part it was incumbent on him to prove, either that the plaintiff did not give any consideration in law, .for the' instrument or obligation- upon which the suit was founded, or that the considera, tion upon which it was made, had entirely failed.

The instrument itself furnishing prima facie evidence of a consideration, was produced by the plaintiff, and read in evidence without objection. The defendant then proved by a witness, that the writing sued on was drawn by him and executed by the defendant: that the consideration for which it was executed, was the assignment of a patent for a tract of land: that the said patent at the time of the execution of the instrument sued on, was assigned by the plaintiff, by endorsement in writing, and received bv the defendant: that at the time when the assignment was made and the note executed, the plaintiff represented to the defendant that the tract of land .particularly described in the patent, was situate within five or six miles of the city of Little Rock, in the State of Arkansas, and that if it was not of the description set fortín in the patent and the endorsements thereon, he would make it as good, and said he had a title to the land and a right to sell it: the patent and the endorsements thereon were also read in evidence, and, by the bill of exceptions, are made a part of the record. The defendant also proved, by another witness, that be had heard the plaintiff in conversation, upon being asked if he had heard that said land was sold for taxes, say that lie had long ago known that it was sold for taxes — which was all the evidence given in the case.

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Related

Bourque v. Edwards
339 S.W.2d 436 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1960)
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238 S.W.2d 495 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1951)
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200 S.W.2d 517 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ark. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gage-v-melton-ark-1838.