Mankin v. Aldridge

105 S.E. 459, 127 Va. 761, 1920 Va. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 105 S.E. 459 (Mankin v. Aldridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mankin v. Aldridge, 105 S.E. 459, 127 Va. 761, 1920 Va. LEXIS 83 (Va. 1920).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This proceeding by motion was inaugurated by the following notice and account:

“To Speed Mankin:
“Take3 notice: That on Monday the 17th day of March, 1919, that being a day of the March term of the Circuit Court of Dickenson county, Virginia, I shall move said court for judgment against you for the sum of $622.40 with interest thereon from February 1, 1919, that being a balance due me from you on account, a copy of which is hereto attached, and which amount you have been frequently requested to pay but which you have refused.
“This February 25, 1919.
(Signed) “F. M. Aldridge.
[764]*764“Speed Mankin.
“In Acct. with F. M. Aldridge.
1918. Sept.
“ To 7 hrs. work, 35 cts..............................$ 2.45
15,500 staves, Long Branch, $6.00 per M.......... 93.00
“ 9,000 staves out of Mill Hollow, $5.00 per M....... 45.00
7,000 staves out of head of Mill Hollow, $5.00 per M.. 35.00
39,000 short staves C 50 per M..................... 19.50
Oct. 11,100 staves—$1.00 per M........................ 11.10
“ 169,000 staves at $1.00 per M..................... 169.00
14,400 staves at $1.00 per M........... 14.40
“ Team work, 33 hrs., at 70c....................... 23.80
“ To Dewey Mullins, 29 hrs., at 25c.................. 7.25
Delivering Blocks by way of shoot................. 7.00
“ To work by F. M., Aldridge, 37 hrs., at 35c.......... 12.95f
“ To Joe Johnson and horse, 50c...................... 1.00
“ To Joe Johnson, 2 hrs., at 35c.................... .70
Dec. 58,000 bolts, Laurel Branch, $6.00 per M........... 348.00
“ 22,000 bolts, Mill Branch, $5.00 per M............. 110.00
“ To repairing shoot ............................... 3.50
“ To gather blocks from wood 2 days............... 7.00
To same Bulger Stanley, 18 hrs., at 50c........... 9.00
“ To bal. on gathering blocks from woods........... 39.65^
$ 983.70
Total credits ............................... 361.30
To balance ..................................$ 622.40
24.40'
» $ 598.00

[1, 2] The defendant demurred to the notice and also called for a bill of particulars under the provision of sec. 3249, Code 1904, sec. 6091, Code 1919. The trial court overruled the demurrer and denied the application for the bill of particulars. In a proceeding of this kind the notice takes the place of the writ and the declaration, and while the notice is viewed with great indulgence it must set out matter sufficient to maintain the action, and whether or not it does so is tested by a demurrer to the notice. What is lacking in allegation cannot be supplied by evidence. There must be both allegation and proof, to entitle a plaintiff to a judgment, and the allegation must precede the [765]*765proof. Security Co. v. Fields, 110, Va, 827, 67 S. E. 342. The tendency of modern times is to simplify matters of mere procedure, and for this reason the procedure by motion is looked upon with great indulgence, and notices are upheld as sufficient, however informal, where they contain sufficient in substance to fairly apprise the defendant of the nature of the demand made upon him, and states sufficient facts to enable the court to say that if the facts stated are proved, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Less than this has never been required in any form of procedure, and probably never will be. This is the test which has been applied to the sufficiency of a declaration, notwithstanding our statute, sec. 6087 of the Code, declaring that no action shall abate for want of form, where the declaration sets forth sufficient matter of substance for the court to proceed upon the merits of the cause.” Va. Portland Cement Co. v. Luck, 103 Va. 427, 49 S. E. 577. The notice must, in substance, comply with these requirements, else it is bad on demurrer. This is illustrated by the case last cited where, in a proceeding against an endorser, the notice was held insufficient because it failed to allege demand and timely notice to the endorser of non-payment. So also, the proof offered must support the case stated in the notice. In Gardner v. Moore, 122 Va. 10, 94 S. E. 162, it was said “in the absence of consent, we do not wish to be understood as sanctioning such a departure as indulged in the instant case, where the complaint was of the violation of a written contract, and evidence was offered of a parol gift.”

[3] The notice in the instant case, is very vague and indefinite. It simply states that judgment will be asked for a, sum stated, “that being a balance due me from you on account, a copy of which is hereto attached.” The account being thus incorporated into the notice would supply the needed certainty if the account itself furnished it. But in many respects it does not. As to a number of the items, however, the account furnishes the needed certainty. [766]*766For example, reading the account and notice together, it is sufficiently alleged that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff for “seven hours’ work, thirty-five cents, $2.45,” and for “team work, thirty-three hours, at seventy cents, $$23.80,” and other like items, but the items as to staves is vague and uncertain, as we shall see. As the notice is sufficient as to a part of the account it was proper to overrule the demurrer. The situation is analogous to a demurrer to a declaration as a whole where the declaration contains several counts, some of which are good and others bad.

[4] The principal items of account, however, have some relation to staves, just what the account does not show. These items are all charged in the same manner, and the first one of them is used to illustrate them all. It is “15,500* staves, Long Branch, $6.00; per M, $93.00.” Naturally this would import a sale of that amount of staves by the plaintiff to the defendant at the price mentioned, but the evidence offered was for hauling the staves. The defendant had a number of men employed about his saw-mill. Some were cutting, some hauling, some sawing and some stacking. All, or practically all, were paid by the thousand, and these items of the account gave the defendant no sufficient notice of the service rendered for which the charges Were made, or even that they were for services. A judgment for the plaintiff under such pleadings would not bar another action for the same cause as the record would not disclose for what the first judgment was rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.E. 459, 127 Va. 761, 1920 Va. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mankin-v-aldridge-va-1920.