Standard Register Company v. Greenberg

132 A.2d 174, 132 A.2d 175, 120 Vt. 112, 1957 Vt. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 7, 1957
Docket1838
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 132 A.2d 174 (Standard Register Company v. Greenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Register Company v. Greenberg, 132 A.2d 174, 132 A.2d 175, 120 Vt. 112, 1957 Vt. LEXIS 73 (Vt. 1957).

Opinion

Holden, J.

This action at law is founded in contract. It was instituted by the plaintiff in the Montpelier Municipal *114 Court. The defendant challenged the sufficiency of the complaint by demurrer. The demurrer was sustained and the plaintiffs exception to this ruling was passed to this court before final judgment under the provisions of V. S. 47, §2124.

The complaint sets forth that on May 5, 1954, Harold O. Taylor, Sr., of Woodsville, New Hampshire, the Downey Chevrolet Inc., a New York corporation with its principal business at Montpelier, and this defendant signed an agreement providing for the transfer of some of the assets of Downey Chevrolet, Inc. to Taylor, as provided in a certain written agreement which is referred to in the complaint and attached to it as "Exhibit A”.

One paragraph of the agreement is also recited in the complaint itself;

"The said Downey Chevrolet, Inc., and Nathan Greenberg jointly and severally consent and agree that they will hold Harold O. Taylor, Sr. harmless from any claim that may be now or hereafter asserted by the creditors of the said Downey Chevrolet, Inc.”

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff furnished materials and supplies to Downey Chevrolet, Inc. in the period from February 26, 1954 to April 19, 1954, and by its claim here asserted, seeks recovery for the obligation of Downey Chevrolet, Inc. thus incurred. The complaint states, "Wherefore the plaintiff is entitled to payment of the same under the terms and conditions of the agreement hereto referred to and as set forth in 'Exhibit A’ ”.

In addition to the paragraph quoted in the complaint, the agreement contains this provision material to the rights of this claimant and liabilities of the defendant:

"The said Downey Chevrolet, Inc. agrees that upon the execution of this agreement it will assign to Nathan Green-berg its current accounts receivable due it as of the close of business of Downey Chevrolet, Inc. on May 5th, 1954 and the said Nathan Greenberg in further consideration of the agreement of the Downey Chevrolet, Inc. herein contained as further inducement to the said Downey Chevrolet, Inc. to *115 enter this agreement agrees that from the monies received from said Accounts Receivable or otherwise he will pay or cause to be discharged all claims of common creditors so-called of the said Downey Chevrolet, Inc. and hold the said Downey Chevrolet, Inc. harmless therefrom keeping and retaining any excess from the Accounts Payable to his own uses and purposes.”

The demurrer of the defendant is asserted on two grounds; first, that the complaint fails to state a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant, and secondly, that the complaint alleges no promise on the part of the defendant to pay the plaintiff’s account.

The briefs submitted present three questions. The substance of the first question is: Does the attachment of the written contract, by reference and annexation as an exhibit to the declaration proper, render the instrument a part of the pleadings to provide the allegation of the fact of the contents of the contract?

The propriety of the plaintiff’s attempt to incorporate into his complaint the written agreement by reference and attachment was not questioned by the defendant’s demurrer. Under our Practice Act, the function of' a demurrer is to test the sufficiency of a pleading in matters of substance only. Coburn v. Village of Swanton, 95 Vt 320, 324, 115 A 153; Curtis Funeral Home, Inc. v. Smith Lumber Co., 114 Vt 150, 153, 40 A2d 531. In Newport Savings Bank v. Manley, 114 Vt 347, 348, 45 A2d 199, an answer that pleaded the law of New Hampshire by reference to two cited cases and to a particular section of the statutory law of that State, was held to be a defect in form only and not of substance. The method adopted by the plaintiff to bring before the court the contract relied on is a matter of form, and was within the discretionary control of the trial court when properly brought to its attention. Curtis Funeral Home, Inc. v. Smith Lumber Co., supra, at 153; Newport Savings Bank v. Manley, supra, 348. It should be noted that the cases relied upon by the defendant to the effect that the complaint is unaided by the agreement referred to and attached to the complaint antedated the *116 enactment of No. 90 of the Acts of 1915, referred to as the Practice Act. See Saxe v. City of Burlington, [1898] 70 Vt 449, 452, 41 A 438; Dickerman v. Vt. Mutual Insurance Co., [1894] 67 Vt 99, 100, 30 A 808, and Estes v. Whipple, [1840] 12 Vt 373, 376.

Inclusion of the exhibit as a part of the pleading does not appear to work any hardship on this defendant. Reference to the writing, coupled with its annexation to the complaint, brings the context of the agreement before the court as effectively as a recopy of the document verbatim, into the body of the complaint itself. Recognition was afforded to this method of pleading in Chittenden County Trust Co. v. Wain, 117 Vt 219, 222, 89 A2d 120, although the precise point was not raised. The rule permitting such method of pleading is accepted, with varying limitations, in numerous other jurisdictions. See 71 CJS, Pleading, §375, page 787; 41 Am Jur, Pleading, §§55 and 56, page 787. And even by rigid rules of common law pleading, a writing became a part of a declaration by profert and oyer, to be considered on demurrer. Story v. Kimball, 6 Vt 541, 544; Morrill’s Admx. v. Catholic Foresters, 79 Vt 479, 486, 65 A 526. The written agreement of the defendant with Downey Chevrolet, Inc. and Taylor, exhibited with the complaint, is to be considered in determining the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s pleading.

Such practice does not encroach on the established rule that specifications form no part of a declaration in general assumpsit as stated in Butler v. Milton Co-op. Dairy Corp., 112 Vt 517, 518, 28 A2d 395; Fuller v. Morrison, 106 Vt 17, 19, 169 A 7. By paragraph 8 of Rule 11 of the Rules of County Court, a declaration in common counts constitutes a sufficient complaint and, standing alone, states a cause of action. Specifications are the creature of the corut. NY Central Railroad v. Clark, 92 Vt 375, 377, 104 A 343. They are required by County Court Rule 17 to complement the general statement of a cause of action, to circumscribe the recovery sought on a broad and unrefined pleading in contract. See Fuller v. Morrison, supra, at page 20. The courts require their filing in limited actions of general assumpsit and account, in fair *117 ness to the defendant, to prevent surprise and to insure that he will be informed of the nature of the obligation declared upon that he may be prepared to meet it at the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A.2d 174, 132 A.2d 175, 120 Vt. 112, 1957 Vt. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-register-company-v-greenberg-vt-1957.