Gregory v. Woodworth
This text of 77 N.W. 837 (Gregory v. Woodworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
I. This is the second appeal in this case, See 93 Iowa, 246. The action is to recover for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff on the fourth day of June, 1892, caused, 'as is alleged, by defendant’s dog. On his first petition the plaintiff alleged as shown in the opinion filed January 17,1895, on the former appeal. After the filing of said opinion, the plaintiff, on the tenth day of July, 1895, filed this petition, and thereafter two amendments thereto, in the district court. This petition states the cause of action substantially as in the first, with the additional allegations that plaintiff was free from blame or negligence contributing to his said injuries, and that he was free from any negligence in prosecuting his suit on his first'petition. In the first amendment he alleges that the injuries complained of were caused solely by the acts of defendant’s dog; that he relied upon his attorney in drawing his first petition; that the failure to allege the freedom from fault on plaintiff’s part was not done unthinkingly or negligently, but after due consideration, and in the belief that the statute imposed an absolute liability, except when the party injured was doing an unlawful act. A copy of the demurrer to the first petition is set out, the grounds for which are that the petition does not show that the injury was done by defendant’s dog, nor that the plaintiff was without fault or negligence, nor that other causes than the acts of the dog did not contribute to the injury; also, that it does not show that the dog was at the time, worrying, maiming, or killing any domestic animal, attacking any person, or that the dog was vicious, or that defendant had any knowledge or reason to expect that the dog would do as alleged. In his second amendment the plaintiff alleges that said demurrer to the first petition was sustained by the district court on all grounds, that plaintiff elected to stand on his petition/ and that this court affirmed on the ground that it was not alleged that plaintiff was without fault or negligence contributing to this injury, and that he relied upon the opinion and judgment of his attorney as to the sufficiency of said [153]*153petition. Plaintiff avers that, by reason of the facts in this petition and amendment alleged, “he has been without fault or negligence in the prosecution of this action.” Following this, the opinion rendered on the former appeal is set out at length. The grounds of demurrer to this petition and amendments may be summed up as follows: That the petition shows the cause of action-is barred, and that this is not a continuation of the first action, plaintiff having failed therein by reason of his own negligence; that the petition shows an adjudication on the cause of action; that the petition does not show that the injury was done by defendant’s dog, or that the dog was in the act of worrying, maiming, or killing any domestic animal, or attempting to bite any person, or that the dog was vicious, or known to defendant to be vicious. This demurrer was sustained generally by the district court on the fifteenth day of Play, 189 Y; and, plaintiff electing to stand on his petition, judgment was rendered against him as provided in section 2654, Code 18Y3. -
II. In presenting his first petition the plaintiff said, in effect, “Here is my cause of action, and it is upon these allegations, and these alone, that I claim the right to recover.” Py his demurrer to that petition the defendant said, in effect, that “Admitting all these allegations to,be true, they do not entitle the plaintiff to recover.” The court, assuming, for the purposes of the demurrer, that the allegations of the peti- ■ tion were true, held that they did not entitle the plaintiff to recover, or, in other words, did not show a cause of action. The truth of the -allegations being thus admitted, the case stood upon its merits, the same as if, on a trial, each allegation had been proven, and the ruling on the demurrer was an adjudication on the merits of the case. Plaintiff might then have amended his petition, and presented additional allegations, but this he declined to do, and stood upon his petition; and judgment was rendered against him under said section 2654 of the Code of 18Y3, which provides as follows: “Upon a decision of demurrer if the unsuccessful party fails to [154]*154amend or plead over, the same consequences shall ensue as though a verdict had passed against the plaintiff, or the defendant had made default, as the case may be.” This judgment was affirmed on appeal to this court, and it is the opinion of the majority that the petition shows a final adjudication, and for that reason the demurrer to this petition was properly sustained. — Affirmed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
77 N.W. 837, 107 Iowa 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-woodworth-iowa-1899.