Laun v. Kipp

145 N.W. 183, 155 Wis. 347, 5 A.L.R. 655, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 10
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 145 N.W. 183 (Laun v. Kipp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laun v. Kipp, 145 N.W. 183, 155 Wis. 347, 5 A.L.R. 655, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 10 (Wis. 1914).

Opinions

Marshall, -I.

Appellants’ story as related in the complaint, indicates that they have been the victims, to their loss in the sum of $20,000 more or less, of a systematic course of deception, practiced by respondent and his attorneys, of such subtle character as to impose upon the circuit and this court; securing and maintaining an unconscionable judgment.

[354]*354Tbe court below seems to have thought the complaint was barren of any statement warranting judicial relief from the judgment as originally inequitable, because of absence of specific allegations of fact-respecting the acts constituting the alleged fraud, 'and because of absence of statements of fact showing, affirmatively, reasonable excuse for not discovering the fraud, if there were one, in time to have prevented respondent' from prevailing, as he did, in the first action; and does not state any good ground for relief on account of circumstances' occurring subsequent to the entry of judgment, since relief of that nature is only obtainable by proceedings in the court as well as the action where the judgment was rendered. Whether the complaint, in any event, states facts sufficient to warrant restraining respondent from enforcing his judgment, was not definitely passed upon below. That is probably the most important question in the case.

Whether the complaint sufficiently charges respondent with securing his judgment by fraud, must' be determined by those liberal rules of pleading which have been so many times proclaimed in recent years, and not by the technical rules which the Code makers purposed abolishing.

As has often been said, -in the beginning, particularly in Morse v. Gilman, 16 Wis. 504, the design of the framers of the Code to abolish all old forms of action and substitute for use in all cases the civil action, with a complaint containing in simple understandable language the plaintiff’s story, leaving it for the court to say, regardless of what relief the pleader supposed himself to be entitled to and regardless of the action by any particular name, whether such story calls for any form of judicial relief within the competency of the court to afford, looking at such story,' in all its parts, and in the whole, and taking all facts reasonably inferable from the specific allegations as well as those expressly stated, — was fully recognized and given Its requisite vitality. But, later, for a time, that was somewhat lost sight of and the court came to test pleadings by something akin to the old rules. [355]*355During that period expressions were used in legal opinions indicating that, under all circumstances, an allegation that an act was fraudulently done should be classed as a mere legal conclusion rather than as tendering an issue of fact. It must be appreciated that the Code, as regards the sufficiency of pleadings, has been substantially restored. Technical accuracy in statements, of fact is not required. Facts need not, necessarily, be expressly alleged. 'No very narrow idea is to be indulged in as to what' is a legal, conclusion and what a matter of fact, or mixed law and fact. Whether the pleader had the right conception of his cause of action according to common-law classification is immaterial. Whether he had the right conception of the relief the facts pleaded entitled him to, or the right relief is covered by the prayer, are likewise immaterial. All reasonable doubt's are to be resolved in favor of the pleader. All facts expressly stated and all reasonably inferable therefrom, giving to the language of the pleading the broadest meaning which it will reasonably bear, are to be regarded as sufficiently alleged to meet any challenge for insufficiency. If, viewing the pleading with that large measure of liberality, it discloses a situation warranting any kind of judicial relief, it contains a good cause of action therefor, though very different from that which the pleader supposed himself entitled to.

In all that has been said in an endeavor to restore and entrench the Code beyond any possible danger of its not being permanently given its intended effect, the language of the court, spoken by DixoN, C. J., in Morse v. Gilman, 16 Wis. 504, has not been improved upon. It has been quoted again and again and not too often. More and more it should be appreciated so as to prevent any possibility of a complaint being condemned by the ancient rules for testing it. Note the language of the early phrasing of the rule of the Code:

“A complaint to be overthrown by a demurrer or objection to evidence, must be wholly insufficient. If in any.portion of it, or to any extent, it presents facts sufficient to constitute [356]*356a cause of action, or if a good cause of action can be gathered from it, it will stand, however inartificially these facts may be presented, or however defective, uncertain, or redundant may be the mode of their statement. Contrary to the common-law rule, every reasonable intendment and presumption is to be made in favor of the pleading, and it will not be set aside on demurrer unless it bo so fatally defective that, taking all the facts to be admitted, the court' can say they furnish no cause of action whatever.”

That was broadened, if possible, by the illustrations given of its effect'.

It is notable that Morse v. Gilman, supra, so dropped out of sight that it is found cited but once, and that' shortly- after it was decided, on the particular subject matter, until Miller v. Bayer, 94 Wis. 123, 68 N. W. 869, which is the commencement of a series of some twenty-four citations, giving it the fullest practicable application. The following are but a few of the many illustrations: Milwaukee T. Co. v. Van Valkenburgh, 132 Wis. 638, 112 N. W. 1083; State ex rel. Leiser v. Koch, 138 Wis. 27, 34, 119 N. W. 839; Emerson v. Nash, 124 Wis. 369, 102 N. W. 921; Bannen v. Kindling, 142 Wis. 613, 617, 126 N. W. 5; Hall v. Bell, 143 Wis. 296, 299, 127 N. W. 967; Bruheim v. Stratton, 145 Wis. 271, 273, 129 N. W. 1092; Schmidt v. Joint School Dist. 146 Wis. 635, 639, 132 N. W. 583.

A few excerpts from the cases cited will emphasize the foregoing:

“The liberal rule, which to a very great extent promotes the administration of justice, doing away with the otherwise obstructive efficiency of technical unmeritorious and so rin-prejudicial defects, supplies in a pleading all essential matters not expressly stated when from the express statements they may reasonably be supposed to exist and to have been intended by the pleader to be included in such statements. . . . Reasonable doubts respecting the pleader’s purpose as to matters which the adverse party is fairly entitled to have solved to enable him with due consideration to adopt [357]*357a course of action in^espect thereto, must be presented to tbe court, for the purpose of obtaining enlightenment, by motion to make more definite and certain, not by challenging the pleading for insufficiency.” Milwaukee T. Co. v. Van Valkenburgh, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.W. 183, 155 Wis. 347, 5 A.L.R. 655, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laun-v-kipp-wis-1914.