Harding v. Minear

54 Cal. 502
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
DocketNo. 5,981
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 54 Cal. 502 (Harding v. Minear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harding v. Minear, 54 Cal. 502 (Cal. 1880).

Opinion

Department No. 1, McKee, J.:

Property of the defendant was taken by a writ of attachment issued in this action at the commencement thereof, and upon the defendant giving an undertaking with sureties, as required by § 555 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the attachment was discharged and the property released.

More than four months after the commencement of the action, the defendant instituted proceedings in bankruptcy; and when he had received his certificate of discharge, he applied to the Court below in this action for leave to file a supplemental answer, setting up his discharge in bankruptcy as a bar to the further prosecution of the action. The Court denied the motion, tried the case on the issue joined by the complaint and answer on file, and gave judgment against the defendant; from which the defendant appeals, and assigns as error the action of the Court in denying his motion to file the supplemental answer.

Section 464 of the Code of Civil Procedure declares that the plaintiff and defendant respectively may be allowed, on motion, to make a supplemental complaint or answer, alleging facts ma[505]*505terial to the case occurring after the former complaint or answer. Construing the section of the New York Code applicable to this subject, the courts of that State have decided that the section was intended as a substitute for the former practice in actions at law of a plea puis darrein continuance. In Hoyt v. Sheldon (4 Abbott, 54), it was said that a supplemental answer shall be given in actions at law, in all cases in which a plea puis darrein continuance could have been put- in as a matter of right. (Garner v. Hanna, 6 Duer; Slauson v. Englehart, 34 Barb.; Bates v. Fellows, 4 Bosw.)

It was the practice in common-law courts, after issue joined in an action, to give a day for the parties to appear in Court, by an entry upon the record. This was called the continuance, because thereby the proceedings were continued without interruption from one adjournment to another. (Blackst. Com. vol. 3, p. 316.) In progress of law, the entry on the record became mere matter of form, and might be made at any time to make the record complete ; and subsequently, by an act of Parliament, it became unnecessary to make entry of the continuances at all. But if a new matter of defense arose in a case after issue joined, and between ■ the last continuance and the day set for the reappearance of the parties, the defendant was entitled, on the day for reappearance, to plead it as a matter which had happened after the last continuance, or—as the practice was modified by subsequent legislation—after the last pleading. The effect of such a plea, when pleaded, ivas not to impugn the right of action altogether, but only the right of maintaining it: i. e. since the period when matter of defense arose. The plea itself was considered as a waiver of all previous pleas, and the cause of action was admitted to the same extent as if no other defense had been made but that contained in such a plea. (Wallace v. McConnel, 13 Peters, 136; Yeaton v. Lynn, 5 Id. 223; Spofford v. Woodruff, 2 McLean, 191.)

But the plea had to be allowed by the Court. It was in the breast of the Judge at Nisi Prius whether he would accept it or not; therefore, it was necessary for the party to make it appear to the Judge that it was a true plea. (Bacon’s Abridg. 7, 688.) Thus, in Abbot v. Rugelsby, 26 Car. 11, cited in Bunker [506]*506v. Ash, 9 Johns. 250, it was held that he that offers a plea puis darrein continuance at the Nisi Prius must prove it there ; for unless he make it appear to the Judge that it is a true plea, it is in his discretion whether he will allow it or not, but may proceed to try the cause. And in Hawkins v. Moore, Cro. Car. 261, it is said that such a plea is receivable at the discretion of the justices, if they perceive any verity in it. That practice was followed in the common-law courts until the time of the Codes. Say the Court, in Morgan v. Dwyer, 10 Johns.: “ It rests in the discretion of the Court to receive such a plea, or not, even after more than one continuance, between the time that the matter of the plea arose and the coming in of the plea; and this discretion will be governed by circumstances extrinsic, and which cannot appear on the face of the plea.” And in Curry v. Smith, 50 Me., it is said: “Whether the defendant should be allowed to plead puis darrein continuance is a matter of discretion with the Court. The exercise of this discretion is never matter of exceptions (See also Rowell v. Hayden, 40 Me. 586; Wilson v. Hamilton, 4 S. & R. 238; Lyon v. Marclay, 1 Watts, 261; Juff v. Gibbon, 19 Wend. 240.) This discretion could not be invoked until after the plea had been served, and then it was exercised on a motion to set aside. (7 Bacon’s Abridg. 688; Morgan v. Dwyer, 10 Johns. 249.)

But the Codes produced a change in the practice, and in the name of the plea, so that now, instead of filing it, or its substitute—a supplemental answer—as a matter of course, and moving after it has been served to set it aside, application must be made, under the Code, on motion, or order to show cause, for leave to file it at all. The right to file a supplemental answer is, therefore, not an absolute and positive right, but is made to depend on the leave of the Court in the exercise of a legal discretion. And, say the Appellate Court of New York, the Court must grant leave, unless the motion papers show a case in which the Court may exercise a discretion as to granting or withholding leave. * The application may be refused, if the new defense, although legal, is inequitáble. (Medbury v. Swan, 46 N. Y. 200; Holyoke v. Adams, 59 Id. 233.)

Apply this principle to the proceedings had in the case in [507]*507hand, and it is difficult to resist the conclusion that it would have been inequitable to have allowed the defendant in the case to have interposed his discharge in bankruptcy as a plea in bar to a further prosecution of the action: for the plaintiff had, by his diligence, obtained an attachment lien upon the property of the defendant. That lien was acquired more than four months before the defendant commenced his proceedings in bankruptcy, and according to the provisions of the. Bankrupt Law the attachment was not dissolvable by the discharge of the defendant. The only effect of the discharge was to limit the judgment recoverable in the attachment suit. The plaintiff was entitled at least to a judgment for the enforcement of his attachment lien. (Dagget v. Cook, 37 Conn. 345; Bates v. Tappan, 99 Mass. 376; Doe v. Childress, 21 Wall, 642; Sacramento Bank v. Hadley, 2 P. C. L. J. 470.) The case in hand does not fall within this class of cases, only because the attachment Was discharged, and the attached property released; but it was released upon giving the undertaking required by law for that purpose. The undertaking was therefore given as a substitute for the attachment lien, and to secure a redelivery of the attached property or payment of its value, to be applied to the payment of any judgment recoverable in the case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sparks v. Buckner
57 P.2d 1395 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
Pue v. Bushnell
233 P. 124 (Montana Supreme Court, 1925)
Southern Pacific Co. v. Superior Court
230 P. 952 (California Court of Appeal, 1924)
Tormey v. Miller
160 P. 858 (California Court of Appeal, 1916)
Reed & Co. v. Harshall
108 P. 719 (California Court of Appeal, 1910)
Wells, Fargo & Co. v. McCarthy
90 P. 203 (California Court of Appeal, 1907)
Brown v. Valley View Mining Co.
60 P. 424 (California Supreme Court, 1900)
Bank of Woodland v. Heron
54 P. 537 (California Supreme Court, 1898)
Greenwood v. Adams
21 P. 1134 (California Supreme Court, 1889)
Townsend v. Edwards
25 Fla. 582 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1889)
Seehorn v. Big Meadows & Bodie Wagon Road Co.
60 Cal. 240 (California Supreme Court, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Cal. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-v-minear-cal-1880.