Gates v. Paul

94 N.W. 55, 117 Wis. 170, 1903 Wisc. LEXIS 275
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 94 N.W. 55 (Gates v. Paul) 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
Gates v. Paul, 94 N.W. 55, 117 Wis. 170, 1903 Wisc. LEXIS 275 (Wis. 1903).

Opinion

Maeshall, J.

Counsel for appellant insist that the court erred in allowing the amendment to the complaint. The scope thereof, as intended by respondent’s counsel, as understood by counsel for appellant, and as viewed by the court as well, was intended to change the cause of complaint by eliminating therefrom the element of partnership without changing the scope of the controversy set out as regards the pe[177]*177cuniary results sought, so- as to warrant relief in that regard upon the theory that an express trust in lands was created respecting the property involved in the suit, instead of a partnership with an incidental trust in lands. The cause of action in the broad sense of the term was not intended to be and was not in fact changed, either as regards form or the general scope of the controversy involved, other than the elimination therefrom of the partnership element. It was in equity originally and remained so notwithstanding the amendment. That neither worked a change in the form of the action as regards whether legal or equitable, nor materially changed the nature of the recovery necessary to vindicate the plaintiffs rights. At first, under a certain state of facts, respondent sought to recover as a wronged partner a specified interest in property, and to terminate his relations to the.defendant in respect thereto. In the end he sought to obtain the same relief as regards property rights and to close up the identical subject-matter of controversy which led to the litigation and was the sole ground thereof, by substituting as the primary purpose of the suit the establishment of the relations of trustee and cestui que trust between him and appellant, and the winding up of such relations, for that of partnership relations and the winding up thereof. The result was to drop out the primary matter, the subject of establishing a partnership contract and a dissolution thereof, and substitute in its place the establishment of a trust in land and a termination of the trust. In either case the situation of the real estate and a recovery of an interest therein by the plaintiff was the real substance of the controversy.

It is insisted that the amendment worked a change in the plaintiff’s claim, contrary to the statute governing the matter. We might, as it seems, decide the point involved by citing the single case recently decided by this court, of Post v. Campbell, 110 Wis. 378, 85 N. W. 1032, but inasmuch as counsel have argued with great confidence, apparently, that [178]*178the trial court exceeded its power by granting the amendment and that such case does not govern the matter, we will examine the subject at some length.

Counsel rely upon decisions of the courts of New York, the identity of our Code on the subject of the amendment of pleadings with that of New York, and some recognition in our reports that the scope of the statute as early understood in the latter state should be held to be its scope here. Starting with such premises, several cases are brought to our -attention to show that it is not understood in New York that a complaint can properly be changed by amendment from one to wind up a partnership to one for relief not involving a partnership agreement. In our judgment, such cases, instead of supporting counsel’s contention, when rightly understood are the other way. Without taking time to refer to them in detail, we will say that not one of them holds that it is not within the power of a trial court to allow a complaint to be amended so as to recover upon a different cause of action than the one originally sued on, if it is within the scope of the controversy which the pleader had in mind at the outset. Want of power is one thing; improper administration of power is quite another. It is not infrequent that counsel err by referring to cases where leave to amend was denied in the due administration of power, as authority supporting a contention of want of power. It must be kept in mind that what is challenged here is want of power. Cases holding that a recovery is improper if no amendment is made to cure the defective pleading, and eases where an amendment was applied for and disallowed and it was held on appeal that the disal-lowance was proper though judicial power existed to allow or disallow the same, have no place in our discussion. The fact is that the courts of New York give the power of amendment of pleadings under the Code a much broader scope than is given thereto here, and so do most Code states having provisions on the subject similar to our own. A few examples [179]*179from New York will suffice at this point to emphasize what we have said.

In Truesdell v. Bourlce, 145 N. Y. 612, 40 N. E. 83, cited by counsel, the action was one sounding in tort. A recovery was allowed in the lower court on contract. On appeal that was held error, but because the complaint was not amended in the court below. It was by no means held or suggested that the trial court could not have permitted an amendment if an application therefor had been made, and then have granted judgment. Such an amendment would not be allowable in this state, because of the effect, thereof to change the cause of action from one sounding in tort to one on contract. Not so, however, in New York. The court said: “This action is based upon fraud, and the plaintiff, before he can recover, must prove the complaint or substitute another in its place.” That is readily understood when we keep in view that the court may, in New York, in a proper case, allow such substitution.

Counsel cite Freeman v. Grant, 132 N. Y. 22, 30 N. E. 247. An examination of that discloses plainly that the court recognized judicial power even upon the trial of an action to allow an amendment entirely changing the cause of action, as to form. “That may not ordinarily be done on the trial against the objection of the other party,” said the court.'

In Brown v. Leigh, 49 N. Y. 78, power to change the whole form of the action was distinctly held. We quote from the opinion of Geoveb, J.:

“A plaintiff cannot in an amended complaint add a cause of action belonging to a different class from those in the original, retaining the latter. This would render the amended complaint demurrable. . . . Rut when the causes of action in the original complaint are abandoned this reason no longer applies, it being requisite only that the causes of action in the amended complaint should all belong to the same class. There is no other reason for restricting the causes that may be added.”

[180]*180In Eopf v. U. 8. Baking Go. 21 N. T. Supp. 589, a recent case, the subject of the power of the court to grant amendments to pleadings, as understood in New York, will be found discussed at much length, the conclusion reached being that it may be exercised in a proper case to the extent of changing entirely the cause of action, so long as the real controversy between the parties is not wholly departed from; that with such limitation a cause of action in equity may he changed to one at law, and one sounding in tort changed to one on contract.

In a late work on Code Pleading, by Hepburn, at sec. 306, notice is taken of the fact that in this state, unlike New York and most Code states, the limitation of power to allow amendments of complaints is to stop at such as change the cause of action as to form.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.W. 55, 117 Wis. 170, 1903 Wisc. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-paul-wis-1903.