Kimball & Austin Manufacturing Co. v. Vroman

35 Mich. 310, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 15
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 35 Mich. 310 (Kimball & Austin Manufacturing Co. v. Vroman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimball & Austin Manufacturing Co. v. Vroman, 35 Mich. 310, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 15 (Mich. 1877).

Opinion

Campbell, J.:

Yroman and his deceased co-plaintiff below sued plaintiff in error to recover for a cause of action arising out of an alleged breach of warranty of a steam engine, purchased of the latter, and found so defective as, according to the claim, to be practically useless.

Judgment was recovered below for an amount which seems to be the original purchase money with interest, and error is brought for various causes, including an amendment in the name of the plaintiff in error, and certain rulings on the questions of warranty and damages, as well as on evidence, and on the form of the issues.

The pleadings, as first put in, described as defendant “William A. Tomlinson, as president for the time being of the Kimball & Austin Manufacturing Company, a company organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of said state, and doing business at Kalamazoo in the county aforesaid.”

On the trial an amendment was allowed whereby Tomlin-son’s name and official character were stricken out, and the suit was left to stand as against the company by name. This was excepted to, as creating a change of parties.

The statute of amendments allows the correction of “ any [302]*302mistake in the name of any party or person.” — G. B., § 6051, Sub. 9. In the case of Final v. Backus, 18 Mich., 218, a mistake in a writ was corrected in the name of the original plaintiff, from Baxter to Backus, after defendant had entered default for want of declaration, and the declaration had been filed in the correct name of Backus. The ^default was opened, and after issue joined, the cause was tried on the merits, and on error the amendment was sustained. In Parks v. Barkham, 1 Mich. R., 95, an amendment was held good which changed the defendant’s name from James BarJeham, in the writ and affidavit for replevin, to Joseph Barkham, the process having been served on the right person but under a wrong name.

The statute was not intended to allow changes in the parties actually supposed and intended to be brought before the court. It is only in case of an undesigned misnomer, and where the interests of substantial justice will allow it, without a real change in the identity of the opposing litigants, that such amendments should be permitted. Where, however, no substantial rights are affected, and it is clear what persons were meant to be reached, the law permits the record to be rectified by affixing the true name to the misnamed party.

In the present case the suit was originally brought as it would have been proper to bring it against a joint stock association for manufacturing purposes organized under the law of 1846 (found in chapter Si of the Compiled Laws of 1871) entitled “ An act to regulate private associations and partnerships.” By section ten of that statute all actions against the company were required to be brought against the president for the time being, or some trustee, as nominal defendant, and it was provided that judgments, though in form against such officers, should take effect and operate against the company.

Such companies were not technically corporations, which could not in 1846 be created under general laws, but they resembled these as closely as was possible, and were very different from any ordinary private partnerships.

The declaration originally filed in this case was not drawn in such a way as to indicate the claim to be a personal claim [303]*303against Mr. Tomlinson so as to make the description personal and not official. It is so drawn as to show a purpose of enforcing a liability against an association, the name *of which was the Kimball Ss Austin Manufacturing Company, as the real defendant, represented for the single purpose of suit by Mr. Tomlinson, its president for the time being. The suit was, in legal contemplation, a suit against the association.

The mistake, then, was not in the name or identity of the defendant pursued, but only in regard to the statute under which it was organized as a corporation instead of an association closely resembling a corporation. The case shows that Tomlinson was president of the corporation, and that service was properly made on him as such. The form of his defense was representative and not personal, and under the statute, service made on him is good where the corporation is regularly sued.

In Sherman v. The Proprietors of the Connecticut River Bridge, 11 Mass. R., 338, the suit was orginally brought against “ The Proprietors of a Bridge over Connecticut River, between Montague and Greenfield, late in the County of Sampshire, and now in the County of Franklin.” Such a corporation had once existed for the purpose of building a bridge, but never built it and their charter expired. Subsequently another and distinct corporation called The Proprietors of Connecticut River Bridge was created, who built the bridge concerning which the action arose. The writ was served on the clerk of this latter company, but the suit was in form against the former which had ceased to exist. There was no legal identity or succession between the two corporations. Nevertheless an amendment was permitted whereby the name of the existing body was substituted for that of the expired corporation. The process having been served on the new company, it was held a common case of misnomer which justified the correction.

That case resembles this in its legal features, and goes beyond it in permitting a change where the record did not show any identity of names in the parties sought to be pur[304]*304sued. In the present ease the company named as defendant in its corporate capacity was named in a statutory *cliaracter of association as real defendant in the first place, and only sued by a representative instead of personally. No one could be ignorant of the real object of the suit, and the service was made precisely as It would have been had no mistake been made.

It seems to us that the case is fairly within the equity as well as language of the statute, and the amendment was rightly allowed.

The questions of evidence on which errors are alleged relate to proof of incorporation, and to the admissions or declarations of various persons, which are claimed to have been no more-than hearsay, as well as to the exclusion of some testimony offered.

The defendant’s counsel, having admitted its incorporation, objected to the production of the articles of incorporation. This testimony was properly received, as it would be absurd* to hold that any party by his bald admissions on a trial could shut out legal evidence. — John Hancock Mutual life Ins. Co. v. Moore, 34 Mich. R., 41. One very proper reason for desiring to introduce the document was to show the names of the corporators, some of whom acted in the bargain on which suit was brought.

In addition to evidence concerning the terms of the negotiation and the statements and representations attending it, the testimony showed that immediately after the first trial of the engine the purchasers complained of the failure to defendant, and its manager sent out a man named Charles Barrett to fix it. Evidence was given, under objection, of Barrett’s statements concerning the condition of the engine while working at it and trying it. The objection urged in this court is, that some of these statements were not made to plaintiffs but to strangers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Mich. 310, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimball-austin-manufacturing-co-v-vroman-mich-1877.