Springer v. Swift

239 N.W. 171, 59 S.D. 208, 78 A.L.R. 1171, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 186
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1931
DocketFile No. 7125.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 239 N.W. 171 (Springer v. Swift) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springer v. Swift, 239 N.W. 171, 59 S.D. 208, 78 A.L.R. 1171, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 186 (S.D. 1931).

Opinion

CAMPBEEE, J.

Plaintiff instituted her action against the defendant to recover actual and exemplary damages for slander. The complaint undertook to set forth two causes of action. The first cause of action charged that the defendant wrongful^, fraudulenty, and maliciously published to Mrs. Charles L. Swift, his wife, a certain false, untrue, and slanderous statement concerning the plaintiff imputing to the plaintiff thereby the present existence of an infectious, contagious, and loathsome disease. As to the first cause of action, there is no allegation that the statement was made in the presence or hearing of any one other than defendant’s wife. The gist of the second cause of action is set out in paragraph four thereof as follows:

“That the defendant, Charles L. Swift, did wrongfully, fraudulently, and maliciously publish and circulate a false, untrue, libelous and slanderous statement concerning' the plaintiff in that this statement imputed to her the present existence of .an infectious, contagious and loathsome disease, to-wit:
“That on or about the ist day of 'November, 1927, the defendant, Charles E. Swift, made in substance the following- slanderous *211 statement to said Mrs. Charles R. Swift, in the presence and hearing of one Thelma Young in the Swift Hospital at Martin, S. D.,— ‘You should not have told Alvina Young and Isabel Rivermont that Mrs. Springer has the syphilis; it has caused them a lot of trouble to look for another boarding place; they probably could not have carried the germs back here by boarding there anyway.’ ”

Defendant demurred separately to both causes of action, claiming as to each that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. An order was entered sustaining the demurrer as to the first cause of action and overruling the demurrer as to the second cause of action, and written notice thereof served upon plaintiff’s counsel. Plaintiff did not attempt to plead over on the first cause of action. Defendant answered as to the second cause of action by interposing what was, in substance, a general denial, save for certain admissions of fact as to the residence and occupation of plaintiff and the residence and occupation of defendant. Issue being joined and the case coming on for trial,' defendant again challenged the sufficiency of the second cause of action by demurrer ore tenus objecting to the introduction of any evidence thereunder, for the reason that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The learned trial judge sustained defendant’s objection. Thereupon, having previously sustained the formal demurrer to the first cause of action and 'having now sustained the demurrer ore tenus to the second cause of action, the court entered a general judgment, on defendant’s motion, in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff upon all the issues, dismissing the entire complaint upon its merits, and awarding defendant his costs.

From' this judgment, plaintiff has now. appealed, and urges the validity and sufficiency of each of the two causes of action attempted' to be stated in her complaint.

At the outset, we meet two practice points. The order sustaining the formal demurrer to the first cause of action was made and entered November 8, 1928. The final judgment was made and entered August 9, 1929, and the appeal from said judgment was taken August 2, 1930. Respondent urges, inasmuch as appellant might have appealed from the order sustaining the demurrer to the first cause of action (section 3168, Rev. Code 1919) within sixty days after written notice of the filing thereof *212 (section 3147, Rev. Code 1919), and failed so to do, that the propriety of said order cannot now be challenged on appeal from the final judgment. Section 3169, Rev. Code 1919, provides that upon an appeal from a judgment this court may review any intermediate order or determination of the court below which involves the merits and necessarily affects the judgment appearing upon the record. An order sustaining a demurrer to a complaint is an intermediate order involving the merits, and where plaintiff has not waived his objections to such order by thereafter pleading over, he may review the same either by direct appeal from the order, or by appeal from the final judgment thereon entered upon a proper record. Thomas v. Issenhuth (1904) 18 S. D. 303, 100 N. W. 436.

As to the second practice point, appellant maintains that, when respondent interposed an answer after his demurrer to the second cause of action had been overruled, he thereby waived his objections to the sufficiency of statement of said cause of action for all time. Appellant states her contention in this regard in her brief as follows : “By answering over after the court’s decision that the complaint in the second cause stated a good cause of action, the defendant waived the question of the sufficiency of the Complaint for all purposes of the trial of this case. That ruling of the Court became the law of this case to the end.”

To this view, likewise, we find ourselves unable to assent. We think that a defendant who demurs to a complaint, and thereafter answers, stands precisely in the same position as though he had answered originally without having demurred at all. Demurrable defects in pleadings are specified in section 2348, Rev. Code 1919. When such matters appear upon the face of the complaint and a demurrer is not interposed, the defendant is deemed to have waived said defects ‘excepting only the objection to the jurisdiction of the court, and the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” Section 2352, Rev. Code 1919. Though note that defendant may thereafter obtain leave of court to withdraw his answer and interpose a demurrer. Bebout v. Pense, 31 S. D. 619, 141 N. W. 515. When defendant demurs to a complaint upon a ground other than the jurisdiction of the court or the insufficiency of facts and upon overruling of his demurrer *213 answers, the entire objection is deemed to have been waived just as though he had answered without demurrer. On the other hand, when defendant demurs to a complaint for lack of jurisdiction of the court or for insufficiency of facts, and his demurrer being overruled, answers, he is still in the same position as though his demurrer had never been interposed; but by the express provisions of section 2352, Rev. 'Code 19x9, his objection to the defect is not waived. He has, of course, lost the benefit of attacking such defect by the particular method of demurrer. By answering over, he has lost the right of direct appeal from the order overruling his demurrer. Pierson v. Minnehaha County, 26 S. D. 462, 128 N. W. 616, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 386. And he has also lost the right, in the event he later appeals from some subsequent order in the cause or from an adverse final judgment therein, to assign as error, and review upon such appeal, the order overruling his 'demurrer. Schwitz v. Thomas, 38 S. D. 180, 160 N. W. 734; Sogn v. Koetzle, 38 S. D. 99, 160 N. W. 520 (these two cases must be taken as overruling a contrary holding on this particular point in Pierson v. Minnehaha County, 28 S. D. 534, 134 N. W. 212, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 261, although, by inadvertence or otherwise they fail to make any mention whatever thereof) ; State ex rel Smith v. Miers, 49 S. D. 96, 206 N. W. 236; Tschetter v. Hofer, 57 S. D. 272, 231 N. W. 937.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 N.W. 171, 59 S.D. 208, 78 A.L.R. 1171, 1931 S.D. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springer-v-swift-sd-1931.