Hanly & Scott v. Holmes & Elliott

1 Mo. 84
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Mo. 84 (Hanly & Scott v. Holmes & Elliott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanly & Scott v. Holmes & Elliott, 1 Mo. 84 (Mo. 1821).

Opinion

Jones, J.

It appears from the record, transmitted to this Count from the Court below, that the plaintifij, Holmes & Elliott, on the 7th April, 1818, filed their declaration in the Clerk’s office, against the two defendants, Hanly & Scott, (and two others,) in a plea of debt, on several notes of hand, on which day, a capias issued against the defendants, also in a plea of debt, returnable to the then next term, second Monday of J une, on which day the Sheriff' returned the said writ, as executed on the defendants, Hanly & Scott, who gave bail, and as to the two other defendants, non est. That at April term, 1818, (the word c:Jlpril” supposed to have been, through mistake, inserted in the transcript, instead of “dime,”) the defendants, Hanly & Scott, plead nil debet, and tendered an issue, and the plaintiffs joined in issue, when tbe cause was continued until October term following; at which term, on motion of the plaintiffs’ attorney; leave was given him to file an amended declaration, which was done accoidingly. This dicta ation is in a plea of trespass on the case, on several notes of hand, and the cause was continued to April term, 1819, when judgment, by nil dicit, was entered against the1 defendants for damages and costs. The record hasbeen brought to this Court by writ of error, and the errors assigned, are: First, that after defenda its had appeared and pleaded, and issue was joined, and the cause continued at the June term, 1818, that at October term, then next, the plaintiffs had leave to amend their declaration, and filed a new one, in trespass cm the case, on which judgment was obtained; second, that it does not appear that the defendants were ever served with process in the said action of trespass on the case, or any notice given them in any manner whatever; third, that the judgment was rendered at the April term, 1819, without notice to the plaintiffs in error, or their counsel, or any rule to plead, or being required to answer thereto, at any time or place, or in any manner whatever; fourth, that the action is in debt, and the judgment for damages only; fifth, that the judgment is against flanly and Scott, when both the declaration and writs are against Hanly and Scott (and two others,) and no reason appears for a severance in the judgment; sixth, the first declaration is not withdrawn, and is an action of debt; the second is an action of assumpsit, which is a misjoinder; seventh the judgment is by nil dicit, whereas there was a plea filed in due time, to the first action or count, and issue thereupon to the country; eighth, that the issue to the first count was not in any manner disposed of; ninth, that Hanly and Scott were not served with process, or notified in any manner, of the action in which the judgment was [61]*61■rendered. In this cause two material questions present themselves for discussion: first, whether, after issue joined in one form of action, a plaintiff can, on leave to -amend his declaration, file a new one in another and different action; and second, if so, whether judgment by nil dicit can he entered on this amended declaration, so long as the plea to the first form of action was neither withdrawn nor set aside.

The plaintiff’s counsel (in error) have contended, and produced several authorities which show, that the writ and declaration must be conformable to each other, 5 Com. Dig. c. 13; 3 Black. Com. 393; 6 Term Reports, 653, 4; 1 Chitty 248; and, that on leave given to amend a declaration, (the defendant, plaintiff below,) could not legally file one in another form of action, different from the writ; and the defendants contend they had a right to file the amended declaration, in the manner they had done; and in support of their position have adveited to the practice in the English Courts, of filing declarations by the bye.

Having on another occasion, at this term, given my opinion that our judicial proceedings ought not to be regulated by the rule of practice in those Courts, and that they have never been adopted (nor, indeed, could they, for want of several officers which we have not) in our Courts, I shall, without further observations, proceed to investigate the mode in which actions must be commenced and prosecuted in this country, not by mies of Courts, but by positive statutory provisions. The judiciary act of 1810, (Digest, 248,) requires the declaration to be filed with the Clerk,, containing the true nature of Ms demand, on which the proper writ is to be endorsed, and that there should be fifteen days at least between the execution of such writ and the term to which it is returnable. Anfl the act of 1815, (Digest, 245, 6,) requires that service of a ’summons shall be by reading the writ and declaration to the defendant, or delivering him a copy thereof, or leaving such copy at his usual place of abode, with some person of the family, and informing such person of the contents. The incipiency of an action, therefore, with us is not founded on fiction, (as it is in England, where a party is served with process to answer, he does not know whom, non for what cause of complaint;) here the writ and declaration, with the true nature of the demand, must- either be read, or a copy delivered to him, at least fifteen days before the term, in order that he may make preparations for his defence. The practice of declaring by'the bye, would not only be in direct violation of the statutes, but would also be attended with much more hardship and inconvenience than is generally supposed. A person may have suit brought against him for a debt, which he may, by making some sacrifices, be able to meet at the return term, or perhaps may have just defence in law to make to it. He comes to Court, prepared for one of these purposes, and is surprised and taken unawares, not by a writ, but by a declaration filed against him by the bye, for a different cause of action. Let me suppose a case: A. has two notes of B.’s, one for $100 and another for a $1000; a writ is issued and served on B. in an action of debt, for the first sum, which he is prepared to meet by defence to the action or payment of the demand. Would it, (let me ask,) be either reasonable or just, (laying our statutes aside,) that A. should at the return term, without any previous notice, be at liberty, by filing a declaration by the bye, to compel B. to answer a demand, for the payment of which, he had no idea of being called upon. Again, supposing the first note due before issuing the writ, and the larger one would not be so until the day before the return term, if the method of declaring by the bye should be permitted, such a declaration might, at the return term, of the writ, he filed against B, for the latter debt. The [62]*62same inconvenience would occur, were he to he declared against by the bye, on bonds or notes which had been assigned to Jl. after service of the writ in the first action.

Much has been said, and many distinctions attempted to have been drawn between leave to amend a declaration, anddeave to file an amended declaration. For my part, I can see no difference; they are, in my opinion, substantially the same. Admitting, however, that the leave to file an amended declaration, means something more than to amend one, I cannot think that, the plaintiff ought to have been permitted to file the second declaration as an amended one. By the term amend, we must suppose something in existence that is in need of amendment, so that we may engraft something new on the old stock.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Mo. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanly-scott-v-holmes-elliott-mo-1821.