Sanchez v. Luna

1 N.M. 238
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 N.M. 238 (Sanchez v. Luna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanchez v. Luna, 1 N.M. 238 (N.M. 1857).

Opinion

By Court,

Benedict, J.:

The record in this case shows that Luna complained before a justice of the peace against Sanchez and two others of an action of forcible entry and detainer under the statute for such purpose. In the justice’s court judgment'was rendered against the defendants, and they appealed to the district court. Then the cause appeared in the district court, and various motions seem to have been made by the parties. The appealing party moved for and obtained leave to file an amended and perfect appeal bond. The same party also moved to dismiss the suit itself, and thereupon the plaintiff obtained leave of the court to amend his cause of action, and the court then overruled the motion to dismiss the suit. The cause was then continued to & later term.

When a subsequent term arrived, the defendant, Sanchez, again moved to dismiss the suit, stating as his grounds, that various causes of action were contained in the petition which had been filed as the amended cause of action, and that the same had not been sworn to, and for various other causes. The court then permitted Luna in open court to swear to the petition, and then the motion to dismiss was overruled and the defendant excepted to the ruling of the court. A change of venue was then prayed for, and the court, uxron this prayer of Luna, ordered the cause to Socorro for trial. It was afterwards tried in that county, and the jury found a verdict against Sanchez, and thereupon his counsel moved the court to set aside the verdict, and grant a new trial; wbicb motion was overruled, and tbe court rendered judgment upon tbe verdict, and defendant excepted, and appealed to tbis court.

Tbe errors assigned are:

1. In not dismissing tbe cause for want of an affidavit;
2. In allowing tbe amended petition to be filed;
3. In refusing a new trial.

The statute upon tbis subject provides that tbe complaint of tbe plaintiff shall be sworn to. There is no direct command that tbe oath shall be in tbe affidavit form. It is clear, however, that tbe truth of tbe complaints shall be supported by oath. It is true that it does not clearly appear by tbe justice’s transcript, that tbe complaint was made under oath. It does state that tbe agent of Luna • reclaims and complains against Sanchez and the two others, that they bad possession of lands against tbe will of Luna. It becomes necessary to inquire somewhat as to the power of tbe district courts to allow amendments in causes removed by appeal from justices of tbe peace.

It is not unuseful to turn to tbe legislation of congress to examine tbe spirit wbicb is intended to pervade tbe United States courts upon tbe subject of amendments. It will be seen that tbe rule of proceeding is of tbe most liberal character for tbe furtherance of justice. Section 32 of tbe act of 1789, in volume 1, page 99, of tbe United States statutes at large, provides: “That no summons, writ, declaration, return, process, judgment,' or other proceedings in civil causes in any of tbe courts of tbe United States, shall be abated, arrested, quashed, or reversed for any defect or want of form; but tbe said courts respectively shall proceed and give judgment according as tbe right of tbe cause and matter in law shall appear unto them, without regarding any imperfections, defects, or want of form in such writ, declaration, or other pleading, return, process, judgment, or course of proceedings whatsoever, except those only in case of demurrer, wbicb tbe party demurring shall specially set down and express, together with bis demurrer, as tbe cause thereof. And tbe said courts respectively shall and may, by virtue of tbis act, from time to time, amend all and every such imperfections, defects, and wants of form, other than those only which the party demurring shall express as aforesaid, and may at any time permit either of the parties to amend any defects in the process or pleadings, upon such conditions as the said courts respectively shall, in their discretion and by their rules, prescribe.”

In the notes upon the same page, reference is made to a number of cases adjudicated in the United States courts under this statute. One says, “that the thirty-second section, allowing amendments, is sufficiently comprehensive to embrace causes of appellate as well as original jurisdiction; and there is nothing in the nature of an appellate jurisdiction proceeding, according to the common law, which forbids the granting of amendments.”

It would be an easy matter to show by an abundance of reported cases, that in all courts of the United’ States possessing original jurisdiction, the ample and liberal section 32 has ever been liberally construed in practice for the “furtherance of justice,” and to prevent delay. These authorities are entitled to, and must impose, great weight upon this court, and the section itself “is of a general nature, and not locally inapplicable to the courts in this territory.” The legislature of New Mexico, in prescribing a system of practice for the district courts in causes arising under the laws of the territory, says, in the twenty-seventh section of the practice act: “Each party, by leave of the court, shall have leave to amend upon such terms as the court may think proper at anytime before verdict, judgment, or decree.”

This act follows in the same liberal path marked out by the law of congress. The discretion given to the courts is full and complete over amendments, but it is urged that this discretion is more limited over eases that are brought in the district courts by way of appeals from justices of the-peace. It is not easy to support this position by satisfactory reasons. Power is given by law to the-district courts to try and determine causes appealed from justices’ courts;, appellate power to this extent is lodged in the district courts. They hear and try the appeals de novo. By this we understand that the cause shall be tried upon its merits, as if it was a new action in the court. The court is to be in no wise trammeled in its mode of proceeding by the irregular and untechnical act of the justice of the peace. It would indeed be a very hard rule to deny the court its power and discretion in allowing amendments to place a cause appealed from the justice in such manner before the court, as to be triable, when the whole trial is to be de novo. To forbid the courts this power to amend in this class of. cases, when the power is so general and broad in all other civil suits, would in this country amount to almost a denial of-justice through the means of appeals. The justices of the peace are, for the most part, unskilled, if not uninstructed, in legal forms and technical proceedings. The records in appealed causes in the courts manifest how defective and inartificial the business in the precinct tribunals is transacted. The dockets are rare that can exhibit strict regularity. If, where a litigant presents himself before the district bench with his appeal in hand, the court is powerless in granting to the parties the privilege to correct and perfect what unskillfulness or ignorance has defectively done, the result must be that suitors will be turned from the court with heavy bills of costs, and confidence in legal justice be destroyed.

A narrow and dwarfish policy will usurp the bench in direct conflict with the wise and liberal spirit, intent, and provisions of the congressional and legislative enactments before mentioned.

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Related

State v. Upton
290 P.2d 440 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1955)
Kuykendall v. Ulibarri
239 P.2d 731 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1952)
Puckett v. Walz
72 P.2d 623 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.M. 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanchez-v-luna-nm-1857.