Snure v. Skipworth

300 P.2d 792, 61 N.M. 340
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1956
DocketNo. 6077
StatusPublished

This text of 300 P.2d 792 (Snure v. Skipworth) 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
Snure v. Skipworth, 300 P.2d 792, 61 N.M. 340 (N.M. 1956).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The defendants below, who appear in this Court as appellants, complain of a judgment rendered against them, jointly and severally, in favor of the plaintiff for the aggregate amount of moneys taken from him in a night of gambling at Clovis, New Mexico, in the early morning hours of December 3rd, and continuing until midafternoon of December 4, 1954.

The plaintiff, a young cattleman residing at Apache, Arizona, arrived in Clovis, New Mexico, with four truckloads of cattle a day or two prior to .the dates just mentioned. Soon after his arrival, having made, disposition of his cattle to two different commission houses and, received payment therefor, the plaintiff visited a place known as the Cattlemen’s Club operated by one of the defendants, Jack Skipworth.

The plaintiff had begun drinking after selling his cattle and upon arriving at the club suggested he would like to get' into a poker- game. The defendant, Skipworth, showed a disposition to accommodate the plaintiff, but explained to him that he would have to get tog-ether some poker players before the game could stprt. ■ What he did was to telephone the other two, defendants, Hoyle and Hitson, at Hobbs, New Mexico, some 110 miles away.

The two defendants mentioned, accompanied by a female acquaintance, left Hobbs around midnight, arriving in Clovis about 2:00 a. m. The young girl who had accompanied them from Hobbs was sent back there alone in defendant Skipworth’s car before dawn of the 4th, starting soon after reaching Clovis. The game started at once following receipt of a new deck of cards sent for by plaintiff who seemed reluctant to play 'with any cards on the premises.

Shortly before midnight the plaintiff, growing restless, announced an intention to return to his hotel, but upon assurance by Skipworth that he had called the two other defendants who were then en route, prevailed upon plaintiff to wait. A little later, the plaintiff again showing his impatience, started to go back to his hotel but was reassured by Skipworth that the two players he had called would be there in a short time. The plaintiff had never previously met defendants Hitson and Hoyle and, following introductions, the game started immediately upon their arrival. There was never anyone in the game besides the plaintiff and these three defendants.

The game stopped once when one of the defendants left it, temporarily, and recessed two other times when the plaintiff left the game in search of more money. Except for these short interruptions the game proceeded unabated until three o’clock the afternoon of the day it had begun at 2:00 a. m., previously. The plaintiff continued drinking throughout the progress of the game and grew progressively drunker as the game proceeded. His total losses were $10,183 made up of three cattle commission checks totaling $8,183 given plaintiff by the purchasers of his cattle, all of which bear the endorsement of the defendant Skipworth and a $2,000 draft on plaintiff’s 'Arizona bank procured in the early afternoon of December 3, 1954, when defendant Skip-worth accompanied plaintiff to a Clovis bank in order that the latter could obtain that much cash in order to stay in the game.

The amount of money actually lost by plaintiff became a disputed question of fact at the trial. There was abundant evidence to permit the jury to find, however, that he lost the sum mentioned above, to say the least. The defendants themselves became confused and uncertain in their testimony each, at times, claiming to have won nothing and at other times admitting certain win-, nings. They contended plaintiff had lost, only $750 in the game. The defendant, Skipworth, admitted that he knew other gamblers in Clovis, yet for this game he felt impelled to put in a call at midnight for two gamblers in far away Hobbs.

The matter was submitted to the jury on a general charge which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants, finding they were indebted to him in the sum of $10,183, jointly and severally. The court rendered judgment accordingly. Hence this appeal.

In his first amended complaint filed in the cause below the plaintiff had joined as defendants Clovis National Bank and the Citizens Bank of Clovis, hoping to impound the proceeds of certain checks negotiated by plaintiff in this gambling transaction but after one day of trial, the counsel for plaintiff became convinced the banks were innocent parties in cashing the checks mentioned. They were, accordingly, dismissed out of the case. Prior to dismissal, however, the defendant banks had answered and filed cross-complaints against the three defendants.

After the filing of the first amended complaint the defendants filed a second motion to dismiss on the ground of insufficient allegations as to fraud. The motion was sustained and the allegations of fraud were stricken from the complaint on the ground that fraud was not pleaded with particularity. This left the plaintiff with his statutory action under 1953 Comp. § 22-10-1. When he rested, the defendants moved for a directed verdict which motion was renewed at the conclusion of the case. It was denied in each instance.

■ Subsequently, and following the return into court of a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict which motion was denied. At the hearing on their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the plaintiff made an oral motion to amend his first amended complaint to conform to the proof so as to allege a joint and concerted plan by defendants to win from plaintiff in gambling and share in the winnings. This motion was granted in the following form, to wit:

“That the defendants Skipworth, Hitson and Hoyle participated in a joint and concerted plan and in unison to win said moneys from the plaintiff in said gambling game and to share in the moneys won from the plaintiff in said gambling game.”

The basic theme of counsel for defendants in their effort to overturn the jury’s verdict and secure a reversal is rested on the contention that, after dismissal from the case of the allegations of fraud contained in the first amended complaint, the plaintiff was confined to an action to recover under the statute, all allegations as to fraud, conspiracy and overextension having been stricken from plaintiff’s complaint.

The plaintiff sums up his position on this point, as follows:

First, that no issues were presented to the jury that were not raised by the pleading; that questions of fraud or cheating on the part of the defendants were not submitted to the jury;

Second, that the questions of a joint and concerted plan among the defendants to win the plaintiff’s money at gambling and an agreement to share in the money won from the plaintiff at gambling, were properly presented to the jury.

Third, that the admission of testimony without objection effected an automatic amendment of the pleadings, if necessary, on such questions, and the formal amendment- allowed by the trial court was not necessary.

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300 P.2d 792, 61 N.M. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snure-v-skipworth-nm-1956.