Rawle, Use of Russell v. Skipwith & Wife

8 Mart. (N.S.) 407
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1830
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Mart. (N.S.) 407 (Rawle, Use of Russell v. Skipwith & Wife) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rawle, Use of Russell v. Skipwith & Wife, 8 Mart. (N.S.) 407 (La. 1830).

Opinions

Mathews, J,

This is the third time that this cause has been brought before the supreme court. The appeal immediately preceding the present, was taken from a judgment by default, which was allowed in the court below, in consequence of the judge believing, that no answer had been regularly put in to the merits of the cause. The record shows, that the defendants separated in pleading and filed various exceptions to the petition. Previous to the last return of the cause to the district court, F. Skipwith had commenced proceeding against his creditors s pursuance of our insolvent laws, aproa[408]*408gainst him the present suit was stayed, the cause is therefore to be examined only in relation to Mrs. Skipwith.

The reversal of the judgment by default, was obtained on the ground, that one of the exceptions, pleaded by the wife, embraced the merits of the case, and was virtually an answer making a contestatio litis, which fully authorised and required the introduction of evidence, as in case of issue joined in relation to facts. The correctness of the decision in the supreme court, touching this point of the cause, we believe cannot be questioned, on any sound principles of reason or law: and objections to it, certainly come with a bad grace from the party who received its benefit.

Without entering on a discussion of the principles laid down in our Code of Practice, relative to exceptions, whether declinatory, dilatory, or peremptory, and the whole doctrine of pleading, as therein taught, (in which the counsel for the appellant imagines he sees great confusion and want of perspicuity, and which may possibly exist,) if the third exception made by Mrs. Skipwith be opposed to the allegations of the petition, by which she as sought to be made liable for the debt now [409]*409claimed from her, it will clearly appear that a contest as to facts necessarily arose. The notarial act executed by her conjointly with her husband in favour of the plaintiff, which is made a part of his petition, states especially that she binds herself in solido with her co-obligor, and that the debt, which they oblige themselves to pay, had been converted to the benefit of the wife. The exception amounts to a denial of these facts, by alleging others, with which they are wholly inconsistent ; they cannot both be true. 1. That the debt was contracted by her husband and for his benefit. 2. That in truth she bound herself as surety, which according to law could not be validly done. The cause was tried in the court below, without the introduction of any evidence in support of the defence contained in the exception above stated, and judgment was rendered subjecting property which had been mortgaged to the defendants, and the mortgage by them transferred to the plaintiff, to be sold to satisfy his claim ; from which Mrs. Skipwith appealed.

I find in the record four bills of exceptions taken to the opinions of the judge a quo pronounced on matters which occurred in the [410]*410course of the trial of the cause. The first was on a motion made by the defendant’s counsel to have the cause dismissed on the grounds stated in the third exception contained in the original answer of the appellant. In my opinion, the judge did not err in refusing to dismiss the petition on those grounds. He was correct in considering that exception as embracing a plea to the merits; it formed according to the arguments above stated, a contestatio litis, on the decision of which principally depended the defendant’s liability or exoneration from the debt claimed. The second bill was produced by the refusal of the judge to permit a peremptory exception to be filed, when the cause was called up for trial. Notwithstanding the counsel chose to denominate it as one arising from law, I am of opinion with the district judge, that it rather relates to form, and was offered too late. See C. P. p. 122, art. 343, 344 and 345. The third has relation to an answer which the defendant offered to file. Part of it was received, and part rejected, as “ changing the issue between the parties, and might operate a continuance, on the ground of surprise.” The part rejected was an allegation that the [411]*411appellant was separated in property from her husband by a marriage contract made in France, consequently not bound for his debts; and that the land and negroes, which, by a contract, shows to have been sold to Josias Gray (as stated in the petition) by her and her husband jointly, and on which the mortgage was stipulated in their favor by the vendor, and afterwards in part transferred to the plaintiff, was her separate property, &c.

Taking, as I have done throughout, in this cause, the exceptions first filed on the part of Mrs. Skipwith, as embracing a plea to the merits, and holding the place of an answer, the pleading offered to be filed in the last instance before the district court, must be viewed in the light of an amendment, or amended answer. According to the code of practice, amendments may be made to both petitions and answers, after issue joined, if permission be obtained from the court; the granting of such permission is restrained absolutely, only in cases where the amendments would change the substance of the demand, or that of the defence. C. P. arts. 419, 420. The effects of amendments allowable, is regulated by art. 421.

[412]*412When leave to amend is asked, the first inquiry to be made by the court from which it may be requested, is whether the amendment proposed will have the effect of substantially altering the claim, as set forth in the original petition, or the defence contained in the answer, according as the application may be made by either plaintiff or defendant; for if this effect would necessarily be produced, the law positively prohibits these amendments, leaving no discretion to the courts.

The amendment to the answer proposed in the present case, seems to have been rejected by the judge a quo, under a belief that it changed the issue between the parties, and might operate a continuance of the cause, (which was then on trial) on the ground of surprise. It is not readily perceived in what manner this amendment could change the issue already made by some of the allegations of the petition, and the third exception filed by the defendant. The payment of the debt is claimed from her, as being bound in solido with her husband, and as having been contracted for her benefit. She denies the truth of these facts, by alleging that although the contract was made in the form of an obligation in solido, and in the preamble contains [413]*413an acknowledgement that the debt secured by it had been beneficial to her, yet in truth she only became surety to her husband for the payment of a debt entirely his own, and from which she derived no benefit. In consequence of his insolvent situation (as above stated) proceedings in the suit on the last trial were carried on against her alone; and it is her property only that could be made liable to seizure under the judgment, either as an interest in the community of goods, (if any exist) between her and her husband, or such as she holds separately. Consequently, any additional allegation in the answer, that she is separated in property from her husband, could not materially change the issue between the parties; or in the language of the C. of P., alter the substance of her defence. It was therefore within the discretion of the court below, to have permitted or rejected the amendment proposed.

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8 Mart. (N.S.) 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawle-use-of-russell-v-skipwith-wife-la-1830.