Harvey v. Southern Pac. Co.

80 P. 1061, 46 Or. 505, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 68
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 80 P. 1061 (Harvey v. Southern Pac. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harvey v. Southern Pac. Co., 80 P. 1061, 46 Or. 505, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 68 (Or. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Wolverton

delivered the opinion.

1. The first question presented for our determination is one of practice, and arises upon the trial court’s allowance of the motion requiring the plaintiff to elect as to which cause of action he would proceed upon at the trial. The complaint, we think, may appropriately be characterized as containing a duplicate statement of distinct grounds of recovery for the same right of action; the right arising from the single transaction in killing plaintiff’s animal. The defendant is charged, however, with two culpatory acts in the invasion of plaintiff’s right- — one for a common-law negligence, and the other for failure .to fence, a duty imposed upon it by statute — for either one of which plaintiff is accorded a right of action but the relief is different. Hpon the ground first named, the measure of relief is the value of the animal lost, but upon the other it is the value of the animal, enhanced by reasonable attorney’s fees for the prosecution of the action (Section 5146, B. & C. Comp.), so that there are [510]*510stated in the complaint two grounds of recovery for the same right; affording the plaintiff different reliefs, according to the cause maintained. He could not have two judgments, however, and a judgment in the one form would preclude a judgment in the other, as the law does not allow double damages for the invasion of the same right. For joining the two grounds or causes of action in the same count, the defendant had its motion before answer to strike out the complaint because they were not separately stated: B. & C. Gomp. § 81. By pleading over the right to interpose such a motion was waived.

2. There is, however, another exigency to which this motion does not extend. If there, be duplicate statements of the same cause of action, or statements of different grounds of recovery for the same right, the defendant is entitled, unless in exceptional cases, to have the plaintiff elect upon which ground or cause he will proceed to -trial, and the motion directed to that purpose may be interposed at any time before the trial. Mr. Pomeroy states the rule as follows: “Since the reformed pleading requires the facts to be averred as they actually took place, it does not, in general, permit a single cause of action to be set forth in two or more different forms or counts, as was the familiar practice at the common law. The rule is undoubtedly settled that, under all ordinary circumstances, the plaintiff who has but one cause of action will not be suffered to spread’ it upon the record in differing shapes and modes, as though he possessed two or more distinct demands; and, when he does so without special and sufficient reason, he will be compelled, either by a motion before the trial, or by an application and direction at the trial, to select one of these counts, and to abandon the others”: Pomeroy, Code Bern. (4 éd.), §§467, *576. Mr. Phillips says: “It may safely be said that the true rule, resting upon principle and supported by the weight of authority, now is that where a plaintiff has a single right of recovery that may rest upon one ground or upon another, according to the facts to be shown by the evidence, and he cannot safely foretell the precise nature and limits of the defendant’s liability to be developed upon the trial, he may state his right of action variously, in separate causes of action. This privilege is an exception to the [511]*511general rule that each separate statement should set out a distinct and independent right of action, and, inasmuch as a pluralty of statements multiplies the issues and tends to obscure the real claim which the defendant will have to meet it is to be indulged only where it is fairly necessary for the protection of the plaintiff, and where it will not mislead or embarrass the defendant in his defense”: Phillips, Code Plead. § 207. See, also, Spaulding v. Saltiel 18 Colo. 86 (31 Pac. 486); Cramer v. Oppenstein, 16 Colo. 504 (27 Pac. 716); Brown v. Kansas City, etc., Ry. Co. 20 Mo. App. 429; Otis v. Mechanics’ Bank, 35 Mo. 128; Cartin v. South Bound R. Co. 43 S. C. 221 (20 S. E. 979, 49 Am. St. Rep. 829).

The rule is well illustrated by a case from California. The complaint was filed, containing two counts — one for services performed on a promise to pay therefor a definite sum, and the other for the same services at their reasonable worth — and, upon a motion to require plaintiff to elect, the supreme court, sustaining the ruling of the trial court, said that the plaintiff may set out the facts “in two separate forms when there is a fair and reasonable doubt of his ability to safely plead them in one mode only”: Wilson v. Smith, 61 Cal. 209, 210. So, in Wisconsin, Whitney v. Chicago, etc. Ry. Co. 27 Wis. 327, where ■ the court for a like reason held it to be allowable for the plaintiff to charge the defendant on separate grounds in the capacity of a carrier and a warehouseman. So it was in Bishop v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. 67 Wis. 610, 616 (31 N. W. 219), the court saying : “ ‘Since it is no longer necessary, in order to protect the rights of .the plaintiff, that he should set forth in different counts the same cause of action — variances between the allegations and the proofs being disregarded unless they actually mislead the adverse party to his prejudice upon the merits — the practice of so doing is disapproved of, because it is not in harmony with the spirit of the Code.’ An exception to this method of pleading is recognized by this court in a case when the plaintiff cannot know beforehand the precise nature and limits of the defendant’s liability to him, and in such case it is permissible to allow the plaintiff to state his cause of action differently in different counts.” Upon the other hand, an election was re[512]*512quired in Harris v. Wabash Ry. Co. 51 Mo. App. 125, and Matz v. Chicago & A. R. Co. (C. C.) 88 Fed. 770 — cases very similar to the one at bar. Thre.e counts were contained in each complaint for the same demand or upon the same right of action. One was for a failure to fence as -required by statute; another, for a failure to ring the bell and sound the whistle at a railroad crossing, also in violation of a statute.; and the third, for common-law negligence. In the first case it is said: “The remedy afforded to the defendant in such a case of improper intermingling of causes of action which may be united in one petition, but must be separately stated, is by motion to elect, such as 'was'adopted by this defendant.” And in the other: “Such pleading makes a chance medley, instead of a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, as required by the Code.”

3. The practice, however, of allowing or disallowing a motion of the kind, is a matter largely within the sound discretion of the trial court: Manders v. Craft, 3 Colo. App. 236; Carlton v. Pierce, 1 Allen, 26; Hawley v. Wilkinson, 18 Minn. 525 (Gil. 468); Plummer v. Mold, 22 Minn. 15; Wagner v. Nagel, 33 Minn. 348 (23 N. W. 308); Kerr v. Hays, 35 N. Y. 331.

4. There should not be a confusion of the right of action with the cause of action. Different rights of action should always be separately stated when they can be united in the same complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
80 P. 1061, 46 Or. 505, 1905 Ore. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-southern-pac-co-or-1905.