Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. DeJarnett

111 Ala. 248
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 111 Ala. 248 (Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. DeJarnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. DeJarnett, 111 Ala. 248 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

The action is to recover damages for the loss of a house destroyed by fire. The complaint, as originally framed, consisted of two counts, counting on a policy of insurance. The complaint was amended by adding four additional counts. The third count was also on a policy of insurance. The fourth count claimed that the house was insured under a verbal agreement. The fifth count averred an agreement to issue a policy of insurance, by extending a policy (989), so as to cover the building, and a breach of the agreement. The sixth count is not very clear. As we construe it, the cause of action is based upon an agreement, by which a po'icy already held by the plaintiff (No. 989) was to be extended so as to cover the building in question, and this -was to be effected “by attaching a slip of paper” to that effect to it, instead of issuing a new policy. The breach assigned in this count was the refusal and failure to deliver said policy shotuing the insurance of said frame building ,as aforesaid. The breach averred in this count does not consist in the failure to extend policy 989 so as to cover the frame building, but in the failure to deliver the policy showing the insurance of said frame building. The demurrers to the complaint, and to several of the counts, though in different ways, raise but two questions. The first is, that the cause of action contained in the added counts was a departure from the original cause of action ; and, second, that the cause of action laid in the 4th, 5th and 6th counts came within the operation of the statute of frauds, in that the agreement counted on was verbal, and the same was not to be performed within a year.

We are of the opinion that a demurrer is not the proper mode to reach a count added by way of amendment' to an original complaint, which count sets up a cause of action different from that alleged in the original complaint, unless the cause of action in the new count is such that it cannot be joined with that of the original complaint. An amendment relates back to the time of the original complaint, and a demurrer to the complaint tests the sufficiency of the complaint as a whole, or, if to [257]*257a count, the sufficiency of the particular count. If the demurrer cannot be sustained on one or the other of these grounds, it must be overruled. If there is no misjoinder of causes of action, and each count containing a good cause of action, the demurrer cannot be sustained. A motion to strike the amendment, is the proper remedy, and, if this method is not adopted, the defendant will be held to have waived the right. — Turner v. Roundtree, 30 Ala. 706. There was no motion to strike, but the bill of exceptions states that the defendant objected to the allowance of the amendment. The question cannot be said to have been raised with technical accuracy, but it is one of importance, and we will consider it upon its merits.

The only limitation upon amendments, under our statute, is that there must not be an entire change of either parties plaintiff or defendant, nor an entire new cause of action, nor will an amendment be allowed which will authorizé a recovery upon a cause of action accruing subsequently to the institution of the suit, nor the adding of a cause of action barred by the statute of limitations at the time of the amendment, nor the addition of a count which will cause a misjoinder of causes of action in the same complaint. With these limitations, the right óf amendment cannot be denied. — Mobile Life Ins. Co. v. Randall, 74 A a. 170; Beavers v. Hardie & Co., 59 Ala. 570; Davis v. Motion, 57 Ala. 168; Johnson v. Martin, 54 Ala. 271; Steed v. McIntyre, 68 Ala. 407; Mohr v. Lemle, 69 Ala. 180; Doe v. Richardson, 76 Ala. 329; Jemison v. Governor, 47 Ala. 390; Rapier v. Gulf City, 69 Ala. 476. Exactly what it takes to constitute a new or different cause of action, that may not be added to an original complaint under the statute of amendments, has not been very clearly defined, and different constructions have prevailed in different States. In the case of Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. v. Kinne, 77 Mich. 231, s. c. 18 Am. St. Rep. 398, it was held that a complaint upon a written contract of insurance could not be amended by adding a count for a breach of a verbal agreement to deliver a policy of insurance, — a case very much in point, if the statute of amendments of that State is similar to ours. To the same effect is the case of Hill v. London Assur. Corp., 12 N. Y. Supplement 86. Others might be cited. We have always held that the [258]*258statute of amendments was intended to secure a speedy-trial upon the merits, without extra cost, and should be liberally construed. Our decisions have made use of the expression that the amendment should be allowed unless the cause of action was entirely new. — Ala. authorities supra. It has been held that a declaration in trover could be 'amended by adding a count in case. — 3 Brick. Dig. 31, § 63; Elmore v. Simon, 67 Ala. 526. In the case of Schuessler v. Wilson, 56 Ala. 516, the court allowed an amendment which under some circumstances might have been held a new cause of action from that declared in the original complaint. In the case of Rapier v. Gulf City Paper Co. 69 Ala., supra, one of the tests applied was whether the relief sought under the amended bill was the same as that prayed for in the original bill. In the case of Semple v. Glenn, 91 Ala. 245, the original action was upon an express contract, and the amend d counts were upon the common counts. This court held that the trial court did not err in excluding the common counts, upon the express grounds that there was “nothing in the record to authorize the presumption that the amendment was not intended to introduce new causes of action, but that a comparison showed that the new counts represented separate and distinct causes of action.” To the same effect and for the same reason, was the case of Mahan v. Smitherman, 71 Ala. 563. Nothing is more common in our practice than the addition of the common counts by way of amendment to an original complaint. We are therefore of opinion, when a cause exists which entitles a party to compensation, and its refusal is a breach of an agreement, the party entitled to recover may declare by original complaint in different counts, or by original and amended complaint in different counts, upon the agreement, as being in writing and verbal; and also upon an agreement, verbal and written, that defendant agreed to make a contract of indemnity, and for compensation, followed by appropriate breaches, each count showing that the damage or right to compensation to which the plaintiff is entitled arose from one and the same cause, to-wit, in the case at bar, the loss of the house by fire, and that such a complaint does not contain entirely new and different causes of action. Whether suit be upon the policy or by bill in chancery to enforce specific perform[259]*259anee of an agreement to issue a policy, after the loss by fire, the judgment in the one case and the decree in the other, if full relief is sought, will be the same, — that is, compensation or payment in damages resulting from the fire. We considered these questions, but not in this connection, in the case of Commercial Fire Ins. Co.v. Morris, 105 Ala. 498.

So far as the demurrer to the several counts added to the original complaint raised the question of the statute of frauds, that question was fully disposed of in the case of Ins. Co. v. Morris, 105 Ala. 498, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
111 Ala. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-fire-marine-insurance-v-dejarnett-ala-1895.