State ex rel. First National Bank v. Bourne

131 S.W. 896, 151 Mo. App. 104, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 757
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 896 (State ex rel. First National Bank v. Bourne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. First National Bank v. Bourne, 131 S.W. 896, 151 Mo. App. 104, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 757 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

NIXON, P. J.

Under the theory adopted by both parties in the presentation of this case to the trial court as well as to this court, two questions are pressed for determination and they will be considered in their order.

I. The appellants’ first assignment is that the court committed error in issuing a second alternative writ of mandamus and in failing to pass upon a demurrer filed by them to the first writ, the contention being that while the first writ was undisposed of the court had no power to issue the second writ and that the defendants’ motion to quash the writ for these reasons should have been sustained.

The appellants also contend that the second petition and the alternative writ issued thereon was a complete change of the cause of action, and a departure [117]*117from the original in this, that in the original petition and writ, the only charge of misconduct of the members of the school board was that they had accepted the bid of the Miners Bank, which was lower than the bid of the relator, and that under such allegations, no grounds for relief recognized by law were stated., That the second petition and writ added a charge of fraud,, collusion and bad faith upon the part of the board and the Miners Bank, and that without this charge no cause of action was stated by the relator either in the petition or alternative writ of mandamus.

The authority to allow amendments in eases of proceeding by mandamus is specifically provided for by statute. Section 657, Revised Statutes 1899, contains a general provision for allowing amendments of pleadings, and section 675, Revised Statutes 1899, specifically provides that these provisions shall apply to writs of mandamus as well as to other proceedings. Our statutes relating to amendments- of pleadings leaves a very large discretion to the trial court and allows the curing of defects of form and many errors of substance in pleadings to save rights and advance justice.

Appellants complain, however, that the court erred not only in permitting an amendment, but because the character of the amendment was such as to' constitute a new cause of action. The question in our courts as to what extent amendments should be allowed to petitions is not entirely free from doubt, and some difficulty arises in reconciling all the opinions on this question. The test of allowable amendments in some cases has been formulated in the pronouncement (1) that the same evidence will support both .petitions, and (.2) that the same measure of damages will apply to both, and it has been held that these are the criteria in judging of the allowableness of an amendment. [Scoville v. Glasner, 79 Mo. 449.] But in a later case, our Supreme Court has drifted from this hard and fast rule of inter[118]*118pretation of what is a permissible amendment into a more liberal interpretation of the statute and one more consonant with its spirit. In the case of Rippee v. K. C. Ft. S. & M. Ry. Co., 154 Mo. l. c. 364, 55 S. W. 438, the Supreme Court approved the test announced by the Supreme Court of Vermont in the case of Daley v. Gates, 65 Vt. 592, namely: “As long as the plaintiff adheres to the contract or injury originally declared upon, an alternation of the modes in which the defendant has broken the contract or caused the injury is not an introduction of a new cause of .action.” Our Supreme Court declares that if the amendment is merely the same matter more fully or differently laid to meet the possible scope of the testimony, it is not a change of the cause of action. This opinion seems to meet the views announced by Goode, J., in the case of Stewart & Jackson v. Van Horne, 91 Mo. App. l. c. 655, where he said: “..... although a relaxation of the Procrustean forms, narrow logic and scholastic sublety of the common law in regard to the pleading and practice was as necessary to make judicial proceedings a surer means of determining causes according to their merits, as the transition from mediaeval tenures, regulations and policies was to introduce a broad equality of rights into the law. Justice will too often miscarry if the old technical rules of procedure are not qualified by allowing a wide scope to the privilege of making amendments and the success of litigants will turn too much on the dexterity of their, counsel.” Again, in the same opinion: “The statutes permit amendments which do not substantially change the claim or defense. [Revised Statutes 1899, secs. 657, 659 and 661.] It is reasonable to conclude that the restriction thus placed on the right to amend, otherwise so generously bestowed, and so consonant to the enlightened spirit of the code and its purpose to get rid of all technical embarrassments in the administration of justice, was intended to extend no further than is [119]*119necessary to prevent a party from bringing bis action for the redress of a grievance (or interposing a defense) arising ont of a certain occurrence and after-wards substituting another cause of action or defense growing out of an entirely different one; to confine a party’s pleadings to the transaction first charged to have produced the controversy, and not to exclude an amendment because the two statements of the cause of action merely vary in details. If this limitation was not imposed on the privilege to amend, a party summoned in an action would never know what case he might be called on to meet, while a plaintiff certainly knows, when he sues in what particular affair he thinks he was injured.” The amendment in this case falls clearly within the principles announced in these cases. The same parties are retained in the amended petition as were in the original, and the redress of the same grievance arising out of the same transaction is brought under investigation. The injury charged to have been sustained and for which redress was sought in the first petition was the illegal award of the depositary by the defendants to the lowest instead of the highest bidder. The injury charged to have been committed and for which redress was sought in the amended petition was the illegal award of the same depositary to the highest instead of the lowest bidder; the transaction was the same, and the cause of action was substantially the same. We therefore arrive at the conclusion that the amendment was authorized by the statute and did not substitute an entirely new cause of action. Besides this, however, appellants are gored by the horns of a legal dilemma. If the amendment did not change the original cause of action, the right of amendment existed under section 657, Revised Statutes 1890. If, on the contrary, it was a new cause of action, the defendants, instead of protecting their rights under a special appearance, entered a general and voluntary appearance and thereby conferred upon the court juris[120]*120diction of the action nnder section 566, Revised Statutes 1899.

II. Appellant’ principal contention remains for consideration and is that under the sections of law providing for the awarding of the depositary it is expressly provided that the school board should have the'right to reject any and all bids, and that such authority vested them with discretionary power; that, having the discretionary power, they were authorized to exercise it in view of the facts and circumstances as they saw them; that, having acted their discretion could not be controlled and they could not be directed by the courts what action they should take or to whom they should award the depositary.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 896, 151 Mo. App. 104, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-first-national-bank-v-bourne-moctapp-1910.