Sage v. Hawley

16 Conn. 106
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 16 Conn. 106 (Sage v. Hawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sage v. Hawley, 16 Conn. 106 (Colo. 1844).

Opinions

Storrs, J.

The first ground on which a new trial is asked in this case is, that the proof adduced by the plaintiffs did not support the declaration as to the item of eighty dollars therein mentioned, and that the jury should have been so instructed : and the particular in which it is claimed to have been defective, is, that it failed to prove the mistake as to that item to have been of the precise sum, and to have occurred at the precise time, alleged in the declaration. The validity of this claim depends on the question whether the statements in the declaration, of the particular time of the settlement when the alleged mistake occurred, and of the particular amount of the sum due to the plaintiffs and not embraced in such settlement, are to be deemed allegations of what are termed matters of substance, or of matters of description. If they are of the former kind, they need only to be proved substantially ; if of the latter, they must be proved exactly. We have no doubt that the averments in question are those of matters of substance, and not of description ; and therefore, that they were supported by the evidence offered by the plaintiffs. The true sense and meaning of the allegation respecting the settlement, is no more than that such a settlement took place between the parties ; and of that respecting the indebtedness, merely that there was an indebtedness from the defendant to the plaintiffs omitted to be embraced in such settlement. The time of such settlement is immaterial, provided it took place [111]*111at any time prior to the commencement of the suit, which must be proved on the trial ; and the precise amount of such indebtedness is unimportant to the maintaining of the action ; it is sufficient that any such indebtedness exists; and its amount must also be proved on the trial. The additional statements of a particular day when the settlement was made, and a particular amount of indebtedness, are mere formal averments, and were obviously introduced, not for the purpose of more particularly describing the settlement or indebtedness, or of defining more precisely the cause of action, (for much more minuteness would have been requisite for that purpose.) but only in order to comply with the familiar rules of pleading on the subject of certainty, which require that a time and place should be mentioned when and where every material fact took place ; and that where a material sum or quantity is mentioned, its amount should be specified. Those rules undoubtedly made it necessary for the plaintiffs to state, as matter of allegation, some particular amount of indebtedness from the defendant to the plaintiffs, and (on the supposition that the general indebitatus count would not answer, but that it was necessary to declare specially, as the plaintiffs have done here, averring the settlement and the mistake,) some particular day on which such settlement took place. This particularity was requisite, in order to render the declaration, as matter of pleading, unexceptionable ; but, by the rules of evidence, allegations of time, place, sums and quantities need not be proved precisely as laid, unless they are so descriptive of something which is essential to the claim of the party averring them, that the identity between the thing alleged and proved would be thereby destroyed, and the proof be subject to the imputation of what is termed a variance ; which the defendant has very properly disclaimed in the present case. The principles applicable to this point are too familiar to require illustration, and will be found to be very clearly stated and elucidated, in Purcell v. Macnamara, 9 East’s R. 157. and in Greenleaf’s Ev. Part 2. chap. 2.

Our courts, many years since, held, that an action of general indebitatus assumpsit would not lie, after a settlement of accounts, to recover for an item of indebtedness omitted by mistake in such settlement ; but that the declaration should be special, pointing out such mistake. And it is urged, by the [112]*112defendant, that as the cause of action must be thus particularly stated, a corresponding particularity of proof is necessary, in order to secure to him the benefit intended by requiring this mode of declaring. The rule that allegations of matters of description only need be exactly proved, applies, however, to all declarations in personal actions, and is not confined to those only where the allegations are of a general character, like general indebitatus assumpsit : and that rule of evidence was not intended to be varied or affected, by the decisions last referred to, which went upon the ground that, unless the declaration was special, the defendant would be unapprized by it of the character of the claims made upon him, and would be therefore liable to be surprised on the trial, by proof of those of which he had had no notice. The range of the plaintiff’s proof is, of course, more restricted, as the declaration is more special ; but the nature or competency of the evidence to prove the issue, is not thereby affected ; and the present is a question of evidence, and not of pleading.

Notwithstanding, however, the decisions referred to, we should, in accordance with the doctrine which universally prevails elsewhere, and the principles at present generally applied to actions of general indebitatus assumpsit, now hold, that a general indebitatus count would sustain a recovery for items of indebtedness omitted by mistake on a settlement of accounts, if there were no other objection. Without going at large into the subject, it may be sufficient to say, that, at the early period when those decisions were made, the general counts in assumpsit were comparatively rarely used ;—their utility and safety had not been completely tested in practice ;—and they were, therefore, regarded with a greater degree of jealousy and disfavour than at present ; and with more than long experience since has shown to be necessary. The apprehended disadvantage to the defendant from the generality of the count, is entirely obviated, by the practice of allowing him to require a bill of particulars from the plaintiff ; and indeed, as remarked by Ellsworth, J. in Clark v. Smith, Kirby’s R. 130. this kind of action, from the equity of the principles on which it proceeds, and the extensiveness of the remedy it gives, is now highly favoured.

The other ground on which the defendant claims a new trial, involves the true construction of that proviso in the [113]*113statute of limitations, which excludes from the computation of the times limited for bringing suits in the cases therein mentioned, the time during which the party, against whom there may be any such cause of action, shall be without this state.

The material facts which appear, bearing on this point, are, that the defendant, being a citizen of and domiciled within this state, and residing therein, with his family, consisting of his wife and several children, publicly left the state, at two successive times, and went to one of the Southern states, where he remained each time for the period of about eight months, for the purpose of taking charge of a store of goods there, and attending to the business of said store ;—and that he so left for the purpose of a temporary absence only, and with the intention of a speedy return to his residence in this state, where he left his family during his absence, and without abandoning, or intending to abandon, his home or domicil in this state ; and that he continued his intention of returning during his said absence.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Conn. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sage-v-hawley-conn-1844.