Stokes v. . Taylor

10 S.E. 566, 104 N.C. 394
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 10 S.E. 566 (Stokes v. . Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stokes v. . Taylor, 10 S.E. 566, 104 N.C. 394 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

*395 Clark, J.:

The allegation of the' complaint is that the defendant is justly indebted to the- plaintiff $1,440 “ for services performed as clerk in defendants store, from 1st of April, 1878, to 1st of April, 1884, at $20, per month, subject to a credit of $140, which plaintiff is indebted to defendant by book account.” The answer denies the allegation of the complaint and pleads also the statute of limitations.

On the trial, the plaintiff testified that, in the spring of 1878, he entered the service of defendant for an indefinite period of time, with the understanding that he was to be paid whatever disservices were worth, and, with that understanding, remained with the defendant a-bout six years, and that his services were worth $20 a month. To this evidence defendant objected, on the ground that the complaint set forth a special contract for six years’ service at $20 per month, and plaintiff should not be .allowed to prove as upon a quantum meruit, or an implied contract.

Evidence admitted, and defendant excepted.

The Court instructed the jury, that, upon the complaint, plaintiff would be allowed to prove, either a special or implied contract, and he could recover pn either if the evidence justified it, and plaintiff was not restricted to proof of a special contract.

Under the common law rules of pleading, the requirement of accuracy and precision was often pushed to the extreme. There have been cases where the rights of litigants were determined, not on the merits of the controversy, but on such technicalities as the pleader having, unfortunately, used the word “had,” in the past tense, instead of “ have,” in the present tense. Even in the modern reports of Meeson and Welsby, instances of almost equal absurdity and refinement are to be found. These ideas were entirely abrogated in this country by the Codes of Civil Procedure ■wherever adopted. In England, after a series of improvements, beginning in 1884, when .the celebrated “Rules of *396 Hilary Term” were, adopted, the British Parliament has swept them out of the English law, and has introduced the substance of the American Reformed Civil Procedure. Pomeroy Civil Remedies, §509. The rule of the common law was that every pleading should be construed strongly against the pleader. The Code system is just the reverse. “In the construction of a pleading for the purpose of determining its effect, its allegations shall be liberally construed with a view of substantial justice between the parties.” The Code, § 260.

In the dissenting opinion of the very learned late Chief Justice, in Jones v. Mial, 79 N. C., 167, he lays down the proposition that technical distinctions obtaining under the former system of pleading and practice, between declarations on special contracts and on the common counts in assumpsit, are abolished by the “more rational and simple system of the present Code,” and that when “the essential facts are contained in the pleadings, whether the remedy is on the special contract or on the common counts, it ought not to be denied ” On a rehearing, this view was sustained by a unanimous Court, Dillard, J., delivering the opinion. The Court held that the plaintiff, having alleg d the facts and asked recovery on a special conlract, could recover on a quantum meruit without amending his complaint.

In Sussdorf v. Schmidt, 55 N. Y., 319, the complaint alleged an agreed compensation for services, but, at the trial, plaintiff was permitted to prove as upon a quantum meruit. This was held no error, or, at most, an immaterial variance. To the same effect are numerous other decisions in the States where the Code system prevails.

It is true that a plaintiff cannot abandon the averments in his complaint and recover upon a different state of facts, unless amendment is allowed. Grant v. Burgwyn, 88 N. C., 95.

In Shelton v. Davis, 69 N. C., 324, Pearson, C. J., says that, while a plaintiff1 “ can sue for a horse and recover a cow,” it *397 is necessary that the plaintiff obtain.an amendment, which the Court can always allow, except when “it would substantially change the claim or defence.” To same effect are Oates v. Kendall, 67 N. C., 241; Bullard v. Johnson, 65 N. C., 436.

The true doctrine to be gathered from all the cases is that, if the substantial facts which constitute a course of action are stated in the complaint, or ean be inferred therefrom by reasonable intendment, though thfe-allegations aie imperfect, incomplete and defective, and such insufficiency pertains rather to the form than to the substance,the proper mode of correction is not by demurrer, nor by excluding evidence at the trial (as was asked in this case), but by a motion, before the trial, to make the averments more definite by amendment. Pom. Civil Rem., § 549; The Code, §261; Moore v. Edmiston, 70 N. C., 510

We have seen, however, in Jones v. Mial and Sussdorf v. Schmidt, supra, that, where the allegation is of an express-contract, proof as upon a quantum meruit was allowable upon the facts in those cases without amendment, it being an immaterial variance. The pleadings in the present case come, however, rather within the rule laid down by Merrimon, J., in Lewis v. Railroad, 95 N. C., 179, for the “facts are so broadly stated that the plaintiff can recover either upon the special contract or upon a quantum mermt.”

Second Exception. — The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that after he quitted the service of the defendant, he continued to get merchandise from defendant, which was charged to his account, as had been done during his service with defendant, which articles*of merchandise, or some of them, were bought and charged within three years of the bringing of this action. It further appeared that no settlement had been made between the plaintiff and the defendant during the six years’ service- or thereafter, and plaintiff offered evidence tending to. show that he and defendant had, at different times, talked of a settlement, *398 and that during said period he had continued to" get goods from defendant upon his account, with the understanding, upon thev part of the plaintiff, that said account for goods was to be adjusted in a final settlement between the parties; that during the six years’ service the.

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10 S.E. 566, 104 N.C. 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-taylor-nc-1889.