Martin v. Bartow Iron Works

16 F. Cas. 888, 35 Ga. 320
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 888 (Martin v. Bartow Iron Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Bartow Iron Works, 16 F. Cas. 888, 35 Ga. 320 (Ga. 1867).

Opinion

Erskine, J.

This is an action of debt brought by the plaintiff against the defendant on a sealed instrument, of ■which the following is a copy;

[321]*321“ $3,000. On or before the 25th day of December next, I promise to pay Ann Y. Martin, or order, three thousand dollars, for value received, as witness’my hand and seal.
Allatoona, January 6th, 1864.
[Signed] T. J. HIGHTOWEE, [L. S.]
Supt. Bartow Iron Works.”

To this action defendant pleaded nine pleas. The first was withdrawn. Eeplications were filed to the fifth and sixth, and issue joined. Special demurrers — several of which contained substantial objections also — were put in to the second, third, fourth, seventh, eighth and ninth pleas.

Defendant, in his second plea, alleges a total failure of consideration, and sets up affirmatively that the promise was made to the plaintiff in consideration of the hire of twenty negro men to work for defendant at the Iron Works in Bartow county, Georgia, for the year 1864, and that it was agreed, as a part of the contract of hiring, that if the Federal army approached near said county, defendant was to remove these hired men and their families, at the expense of plaintiff, and that no hire-should be paid for the time lost by reason of said removal. Defendant then avers that the contingency thus provided for happened, and that he removed them to Macon, Georgia, and that there they were taken possession of by the authorities of the so-called Confederate States, and that he received no hire nor other benefit from their services.

The third plea alleges a partial failure of consideration; but it is in all other respects substantially like the preceding one.

The demurrer to the second plea presents the following objections : That the plea is double in this, that it contains several distinct matters of defence, and that plaintiff cannot take or offer any certain issue upon said plea. Also, that defendant attempts to set up and plead a failure of consideration, and that the matters therein contained, in manner and form as therein pleaded, are not sufficient inlaw to show a failure of consideration, and that plaintiff is not, by law, [322]*322bound to answer the same. Then follows the usual, but (I apprehend) useless formula, that the plea is in artificially pleaded, and is in other respects uncertain.

The objections taken in the demurrer to the third plea are in language, similar, and are stated substantially in like manner as those to the second plea.

Before giving the opinion of the Court on the legal sufficiency or insufficiency of the pleadings in this case, I trust I may not be deemed obtrusive by the bar if I state, briefly, that the long and verbose manner in which pleadings are frequently drawn is unnecessarily laborious to the draftsman and fatiguing to the reader. Take, for example, the precedent tor a general demurrer, as printed in the earlier editions of Chitty, and in other works on pleading, and it will bo found attenuated to some dozen or fifteen lines, whereas, it would be as sufficient by the rules of good pleading, as understood by the fathers of the law, and equally as intelligible, if set forth in two or three. A general demurrer in the following form would, I apprehend, be sufficient in the case under consideration :

Ann V. Martin vs. The Bartow Iron Works.

And the plaintiff, by her attorneys, Hammond, Mynatt and Welborn, says that the second, third, fourth, seventh, eighth and ninth plqas are not sufficient in law.

Vide Stephens on Pleading, 44 — 8th American edition.

And I will here take occasion to repeat, concisely, what I said more at large in the case of Scott, Zerago & Co. vs The Planters' and Mechanics' Bank, that, while I have the honor to preside in this Court, I will discourage, nay, discountenance, all the delicately cunning and curious devices that have crept into the science of pleading.

The law, says Lord Coke, “speaketh by good pleading,” and the day has arrived when this wise axiom of that great master of the common law is to be interpreted liberally. This is an' age of progress and utilitarianism in law as in [323]*323other sciences, and it is therefore high time that the subtleties, verbosities and useless disputations of the ancient pleader give way to common sense and common reason.

A general demurrer enables the party to assail every substantial imperfection in the pleadings of the opposite side without particularizing any of them in his demurrer; but if he thinks proper to point out the faults, this does not vitiate it.

A special demurrer goes to the structure merely, and not to the substance, and it must distinctly and particularly specify wherein the defect lies ; and, indeed, the statutes 27, Eliz., and 4 and 5 Anne, as it is said, oblige the party demurring to lay, as it were, his finger on the very point, otherwise the demurrer may not be noticed. Salk. 219 — Wils. 219 — Snyder v. Cray, 4 Johns, R. 428.

When a party demurs specially, he may, in argument, attack substantial errors.

The first point made in the demurrer to the second plea is, that it!£ is double, in this, that it contains several distinct matters of defence; and, also, that said plaintiff cannot take or offer any certain issue upon said second plea.” It is an ancient and well settled rule that, if a pleading-be double? it is bad on special demurrer ; but the imperfection must, as we have seen, be pointed out in the demurrer. It is not sufficient to say that the plea is double, or that it contains two or several distinct matters, but the pleader must specially show wherein the duplicity consists; (1 Tidd. Pr. 694) for, by pointing out the fault, the adverse party may amend, if he choose, or demand the judgment of the Court on its sufficiency.

The objection for doubleness taken.to the second plea has, 'and in like manner, been also taken to the third. This making the law equally applicable to the one as to the other, both may be passed upon together. Has the piaintiff, in this part or division of the demurrers to these pleas, or to either of them, come within the letter or spirit of the rule laid down? > I think not. No duplicity — if there be any in [324]*324one or both of these pleas — has been pointed out in the demurrer or disclosed in the argument.

Another objection — and it goes to the substance — is taken to the second and third pleas, namely: that defendant has attempted to set up in the second a total failure of consideration, and in the third a partial failure. And Mr. Mynatt, in his argument, contended that neither of these defences could be pleaded to a specialty. Such, doubtless, is the rule of the common law, as generally understood in England ; but with us it has, in several of the States, been changed, or modified, by statutes; while in others, learned Courts have, in a greater or less degree, relaxed this rigid rule, that substantial justice may be done speedily and with as little technical litigation as possible, and without circuity of action.

Whether the writing sued on in this action has all the attributes of the specialty of the common law, is not a question directly before the Court for determination.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 888, 35 Ga. 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-bartow-iron-works-ga-1867.