Rinehart v. Pirkey

101 S.E. 353, 126 Va. 346, 1919 Va. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 20, 1919
DocketNo. 1; No. 2
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 101 S.E. 353 (Rinehart v. Pirkey) 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
Rinehart v. Pirkey, 101 S.E. 353, 126 Va. 346, 1919 Va. LEXIS 100 (Va. 1919).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court:

[351]*351[1, 2] As said in Clark on Contracts (1894 ed.), sec. 314, p. 757, “The acts of the parties may bring about an- obligation quasi ex contractu * * * Where one person confers benefits úpon another for which the latter ought to pay, * * * the obligation rests, as said by Professor Keener, ‘upon the doctrine that a man shall not be allowed to enrich himself unjustly at the expense of another.’ ” This learned work then proceeds in its text to quote from the opinion of this court delivered by Judge Lee in the case of Lawson v. Lawson, 57 Va. (16 Gratt.) 230, at p. 232 (80 Am. Dec. 702, as follows: “ ‘The action of indebitatus assumpsit for money had and received will lie whenever one has the money of another which he has no right to retain, but which ex aequo et bono he should pay over to that other. This action has of late years been greatly extended, because founded on principles of justice; and now embraces all cases in which the defendant is bound by ties of natural justice and equity to refund the money. In such a case no express promise need be proved, because from such relation between the parties the law will imply a debt, and give this action, founded on the equity of the plaintiff’s case, as it were, upon a contract—‘quasi ex contractu,’ as the Roman law expresses it—and upon this debt found the requisite undertaking to pay.’ ”

[3] The alleged causes of action, if they exist, must have arisen under the legal principle above mentioned. Such is the character of such causes of action. Of course the burden of proving all of the facts from which the alleged legal liability will arise rests upon the plaintiff who asserts such liability. How far the pleading of such a plaintiff must descend into allegation of particulars, if at all, beyond the general allegation of such facts as may be sufficient to so apprise the defendant of the cause of action which he is called upon to defend that he cannot reasonably mistake what cause of action is alleged, is the subject of controversy in the case before us.

[352]*352The actions in the cases before us may be maintained if the relationship and acts of the parties bring the cases within the operation of the principle of law above mentioned. It would be out of place for us in the consideration of the cases on the demurrers to the notices to enter, further than we have done above, upon any statement of what relationship and acts of the parties would or would not make a case for the plaintiffs to which the legal principle mentioned would be applicable. Our consideration must be confined to the question of whether the amended notices of motion set out matter of fact sufficient to maintain the actions?

[4] Before proceeding to deal with the question just stated, we should observe that the position is taken in the brief for the defendants that the bills of particulars referred to in the statement of the case preceding this opinion are no part of the original or amended notices of motion, citing a number of authorities and among them George Campbell Co. v. George Angus Co., 91 Va. 441, 22 S. E. 167. That position is unquestionably correct. On the question of the sufficiency of their allegation, the amended notices must stand or fall alone, unaided, in so far as the demurrers are concerned, by the bills of particulars which were filed or any which could be filed in the cases. And the bills of particulars which were filed, went out of the- cases with the original notices when the latter were dismissed (Kelsey v. Punderford, 76 Conn. 277, 56 Atl. 579), and cannot be considered by us as any part of the records before us.

Coming now to the question of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the amended notices:

[5] Under the statutory procedure by motion the notice takes the place of the writ and declaration. Burks’ Pl. & Pr., sec. 97, p. 169. But it does not follow from this that a notice must be as specific in its allegations of fact as is [353]*353essential to the validity of a declaration, for if that were so the object of the statute law in putting in force this reform in pleading—which among other things is “to simplify and shorten pleading * * * (Burks on Pl. & Pr., sec. 97, p. 168) —would be in part, at least, defeated.

[6] As said in the learned and valuable work just quoted concerning notices in a proceeding by motion under our statute law on the subject: “They are viewed with great indulgence by the courts; and if the terms of the notice be general, the court will construe it favorably, and apply it according to the truth of the case, so far as the notice will admit of such application. If it be such that the defendant cannot mistake the object of the motion, it will be sufficient.” Citing Virginia cases. Burks’ Pl. & Pr., sec. 97, p. 169. This of course means that the notice is good on demurrer if the defendant cannot reasonably mistake its object. And, as said in the opinion of the court delivered by Judge Buchanan in Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Pollard, 94 Va. 146, at pp. 158-4, 26 S. E. 421, 422 (36 L. R. A. 271, 64 Am. St. Rep. 715). “If the notice be such that the defendant cannot mistake its object, it will be sufficient. * * $ £jie defendant desires more specific information of the plaintiff’s claim than is contained in the notice, he has the right to move the court to order the plaintiff to file a statement of the particulars of his claim. If the court makes such order and the plaintiff fails to comply with it, the court may exclude evidence of any matter not so plainly described in the notice as to give the defendant information of its character. Code, sec. 3249.”

It is true that this court held in Security Loan Co. v. Fields, 110 Va. 830, 67 S. E. 342, that the notice must state a case in which, if true, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Of the correctness of that statement of the law, as applicable to that particular character of case, we have no sort of doubt. There the liability of the defendant, an endorser, [354]*354depended upon the existence of the facts of the presentment for payment at maturity and the notice having been given of the dishonor of the note. These essential facts were not in any way alleged in the notice. The question there presented was not whether a notice containing a general allegation of such facts in the form of a conclusion of fact, was sufficient; but whether a notice in which there was an entire absence of the allegation of such facts was sufficient.

[7, 8] Certainly the notices under consideration are not insufficient to “state a case,” i. e., to state a cause of action, merely because they are general in their terms. That is to say, they do not fail to sufficiently state a cause of action merely because such statement is in the form of conclusions of fact. This is true in general of declarations, and a fortiori must be true of notices. Therefore, without entering here upon the interesting subject of just how far the informality permitted in a notice will allow H to fall short of the allegations of fact required in a declaration, we deem it sufficient to say concerning the cases before us that if the notices are such that the defendants could not reasonably mistake their object

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.E. 353, 126 Va. 346, 1919 Va. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rinehart-v-pirkey-va-1919.