Southern Maryland Trust Co. v. Henry

155 A. 599, 34 Del. 496, 4 W.W. Harr. 496, 1931 Del. LEXIS 25
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 8, 1931
DocketNo. 36
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 155 A. 599 (Southern Maryland Trust Co. v. Henry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Maryland Trust Co. v. Henry, 155 A. 599, 34 Del. 496, 4 W.W. Harr. 496, 1931 Del. LEXIS 25 (Del. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Harrington, J.,

delivering the opinion of the court:

It is not denied that Samuel J. Henry, of No. 1 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Maryland, and S. J. Henry of the same address are one and the same person; that being true, no question of new parties is involved in the plaintiff’s application to amend.

The defendant claims, however, that notwithstanding that fact, neither the affidavit of demand nor the attachment affidavit can be amended. He further claims that as the latter affidavit is the basis of the whole proceeding it necessarily follows that neither the caption of the suit nor the writ can be amended, and that the whole proceeding must, therefore, be quashed.

This contention is sustained in McGrew v. Steiner, 77 N. J. Law 377, 71 A. 1122, cited by him.

Amendments at any time before judgment in civil causes pending before the Superior Court “so that by error * * * the de[499]*499termination of causes, according to their real merits, shall not be hindered” are, however, expressly authorized by section 24 of article 4 of the Constitution of 1897.

Section 4430 of the Code of 1915, also, provides that the Superior Court at any time before judgment shall have power “to allow amendments either in form, or substance, of any process, pleading, or proceeding” in any civil causes pending before it.

In most particulars where no new parties are involved and where it would prevent delays and promote justice, our courts have, for a number of years, at least, been liberal in exercising the right given by these provisions (In re Veasey, 3 W. W. Harr. [33 Del.] 396, 138 A. 629), but while now permitted in certain cases the same liberality has not been applied to the amendment of affidavits.

In Console Master Speaker Corporation v. Muskegon Wood Products Corporation, 3 W. W. Harr. (33 Del.) 604, 141 A. 109,1 however, after reviewing the prior Delaware cases, the court permitted the amendment of the whole record, including the affidavit on which the attachment was based, by changing the name of the plaintiff from a named corporation to a named company.

Prior Delaware cases had permitted amendments of the prayers of the petitions in both divorce and condemnation proceedings (Jester v. Jester, 4 Boyce 542, 90 A. 82; In re Veasey, 3 W. W. Harr. [33 Del.] 396, 138 A. 629) and differing from the earlier case of Jones v. Jones, 3 Penn. 14, 50 A. 212, and, in principle, from Valley Paper Co. v. Smalley, 2 Marv. 289, 43 A. 176, the plaintiff was permitted to amend a petition in divorce in Tucker v. Tucker, 6 Boyce 439, 100 A. 471, by adding the notarial seal of the officer before whom the petitioner had sworn to the facts alleged in such petition.

While an application to amend was refused in Taylor v. Taylor, 1 W. W. Harr. (31 Del.) 144, 111 A. 780, when the middle letter of the defendant’s given name was incorrectly stated in the action, the error was corrected in the decree.

[500]*500A stricter rule was, however, applied in the earlier cases of Wagner v. Wagner, 3 Penn. 303, 51 A. 603, and Sindowski v. Sindowski, 2 Boyce 547, 84 A. 805.

In Wagner v. Wagner, supra, the court refused to amend a petition for divorce by changing the allegation that the defendant was “guilty of cruel, barbarous, and inhuman treatment” toward the petitioner, to a charge of extreme cruelty, in the language of the statute.

In Sindowski v. Sindowski, supra, the petition alleged

“That the said Rosie Sindowski, being at this time domiciled in the city of Wilmington, on or about the twelfth day of September, A. D. 1909, and continuously from that time, also divers other times previous thereto, was guilty of habitual drunkenness so as to endanger the life and health of Joseph Sindowski and to render cohabitation and living unsafe with her."’

The allegations, both as to residence and the ground for divorce, were held to be insufficient, but leave to amend, so as to comply with the statute, was refused.

Perhaps, the right to amend has been carried further in petitions for writs of mandamus than in any other class of reported cases in this state involving the amendments of affidavits.

In State v. McCoy, 2 Marv. 465, 36 A. 355, the petition was amended by adding to the respondents named in it “and Samuel L. Shaw, sheriff of said County of Kent, constituting the Board of Canvass for said County of Kent.”

The petition in a mandamus case was, also, amended in State v. J. & M. Paper Co., 2 Boyce 116, 78 A. 295, but the character of the amendment, or whether made by consent, or otherwise, does not appear, as the question in controversy was merely as to the right to amend the process to correspond with the amendment already made to the petition.

Most of these cases were considered in Console Master Speaker Corporation v. Muskegon Wood Products Corporation, 3 W. W. Harr. (33 Del.) 604, 141 A. 109, supra.

In permitting the amendment of the name of the party plaintiff in that case, the court not only pointed out that there was no other Delaware corporation with the title of “Console Master Speaker” and that no question of new parties was, therefore, in-[501]*501valved, but, also, pointed out that by reason of that fact the permitted change in the record, including the affidavit, was more in the nature of a formal matter than in substantial allegations of fact. The same may be said to be true in this case as it has already been pointed out that it is not denied that the defendant, S. J. Henry and Samuel J. Henry are one and the same person. The error sought to be corrected by the plaintiff, therefore, merely consists in substituting Mr. Henry’s Christian name “Samuel” for the initial “S” standing therefor.

Perhaps no case in this state, permitting the amendment of an affidavit of demand, can be cited. Woolley on Del. Prac., § 259; Philadelphia Nat. Bank v. Morgan, 1 Marv. 265, 40 A. 1113.

In Philadelphia Nat. Bank v. Morgan, supra, it appeared from the affidavit filed that Levi L. Rue had appeared before a Notary of the State of Pennsylvania and had deposed and said:

1. That he was the assistant cashier of the plaintiff bank.
2. That the office of cashier of that bank was vacant by reason of death, and that he was authorized to perform and did perform all of the duties of that office.
3. That a copy of the promissory note, which constituted the plaintiff’s cause of action, was annexed to the affidavit.
4.-That the sum demanded was $946 with interest from April 5, 1894, “and one and 67/100th dollars for costs of protesting said note, and that said - verily believes the same is justly and truly due.”

This was followed by the words “sworn to and subscribed the day and year aforesaid before me” and was signed by Levi L. Rue.

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Bluebook (online)
155 A. 599, 34 Del. 496, 4 W.W. Harr. 496, 1931 Del. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-maryland-trust-co-v-henry-delsuperct-1931.