Teitig v. Boesman Bros.

31 P. 371, 12 Mont. 404, 1892 Mont. LEXIS 72
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 P. 371 (Teitig v. Boesman Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teitig v. Boesman Bros., 31 P. 371, 12 Mont. 404, 1892 Mont. LEXIS 72 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

Harwood, J.

The first assignment of error by appellant’s counsel is based upon the allowance of said amendment of the complaint, as set forth in the above statement. Appellants [429]*429insist that having pleaded said instrument, alleging that said company had “duly made, executed, and delivered” the same to defendant, and annexed a copy thereof to the answer, “the genuineness and due execution of such instrument” was admitted by reason of plaintiffs’ failure to deny the same by affidavit, as provided in section 98 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which reads as follows: “ When the defense to an action is founded on a written instrument, and a copy thereof is contained in the answer, or is annexed thereto, the genuineness and due execution of such instrument are deemed admitted, unless the plaintiff file with the clerk ,within ten days after the filing of the answer, an affidavit denying the same, and serve a copy thereof on the defendant.” Upon this point appellants cite Sloan v. Diggins, 49 Cal. 40. To this citation may be added Parkison v. Boddiker, 10 Colo. 510; Crowley v. City R. R. Co. 60 Cal. 628; and Fox v. Stockton etc. Agricultural Works, 73 Cal. 273, as treating of the application of said provisions of statute. Respondents resist this position by arguing that the provision of the statute cited was taken from California, where the system of pleading included no replication, and, there being a verified replication provided for in the Montana Code, said statute does not, in reason, apply with the same force as was given to it in California.

Although in our system of pleading, as prescribed in the Code, a replication is provided for, and it is also provided that pleadings shall be verified, still the legislature has retained in the Code, sections 97-99, which are distinct, in their provisions, even from the subject treated in the other portion of chapter 6 of the Code. And the same follow immediately after the provisions defining what pleadings shall be used in a civil action, and their contents and purpose, and that the same shall be verified. From the earliest enactment of the Code in Montana, it has contained provisions similar to those sections, yet in terms varying somewhat from time to time, as the Code has been revised and readopted. The Code adopted by the legislature convened at Baunack in 1864 (§§ 52, 53) provided substantially the same- as sections 97 and 98 of the present Code. In the revision of the Code adopted at the seventh session, convened in 1871, it appears that only the substance of section 52 of the [430]*430Bannack Code (being substantially the same as section 97 of the present Code) was retained. (See 7 Sess. Laws, § 62, Code Civ. Proc.) At the tenth legislative session, another revision of the Code was adopted, and sections 52 and 53 of the earliest Code were again reinstated, side by side, in a slightly modified form, and another section on the same subject was added. (See 10 Sess. Laws, §§ 95-97, Code Civ. Proc.) In the latter revision these provisions appear in exactly the same terms as in sections 97, 98, and 99 of the present Code of Civil Procedure, and have retained that form from the tenth session to the present time. The modification of those provisions, the omission and reinstatement of certain portions thereof, and the addition of a further provision on the same subject in the various revisions of the Code, show the deliberation with which the legislature has enacted them; and during all the time the system of pleading prescribed in this Code, of which these sections are a part, provides for a verified replication as to new matter set forth in the answer. Section 99, which appears to have been added in the revision of 1887 (10 Sess. Laws, § 97, Code Civ. Proc.), sheds additional light upon the intent of the legislature, if any such light was needed. It seems clear, when said sections are considered together, that the legislative intent was to provide that a party may rely upon not being put to the trouble of proving the genuine character and due execution of an instrument upon which an action or defense is founded, where a copy thereof is set out in, or annexed to the pleadings, unless the genuineness or due execution of such instrument is directly denied in the manner required: provided, the party pleading the same allows an inspection of the original on demand. This seems to be a just and salutary provision. Otherwise, mere formal, or possibly captious, denials might in many cases be asserted by a party who had neither made investigation, nor had any positive apprehension that the instrument asserted by copy was fictitious or a forgery, or not duly executed. Such denial might, without just reason, involve great trouble, delay, and expense in proving the matter denied, by reason of the lapse of time, death, or change” of residence of the parties or witnesses. In the case of negotiable instruments, which have extended circulation, it is perceived at once that the rule pre[431]*431scribed in said sections would be a just and salutary one. It should be observed, however, that the requirements of said sections appear to be applicable (1) only to instruments on which the action or defense is founded; (2) only when a copy is set out in the pleadings, or annexed thereto; (3) only where inspection of the original is allowed on demand. It is apparent that there are a great many cases in which written instruments, or other writings offered in evidence in the course of a trial, would not be controlled at all by said provisions. We are not inclined to hold that the proper force and effect of the provisions of sections 97, 98, and 99 of our Code are inapplicable because a replication is provided for in our system of pleading. No doubt the replication can be used to effect the denial of the “genuineness and due execution” of an instrument set forth in the answer, by following the requirement of section 98 of the Code, because the substance of things, and not mere form, is the essential feature. It seems from said provisions that it was intended such denial should, in unequivocal terms, deny the genuineness or due execution of the instrument pleaded by a copy, after full opportunity to examine the original. This certainly could be done by verified replication, where an instrument on which the defense is founded, is set out by copy in, or annexed to, the answer. The only further requirement of section 98 is the service of such denial. But in the case at bar it does not appear that plaintiffs even contend that the denials in the replication answered the requirement of said statute, if this was a case where the provisions of said statute applied.

We think it is apparent, however, that the provisions of said statute have no application to the instrument pleaded in defendants’ answer in this case, and annexed thereto by copy. The object of the action was to contest the right of Kleinschmidt to the property received by him from said company. In the proceedings which preceded this action, Kleinschmidt had held up said assignment as the title by which he claimed the right to receive, hold, and dispose of said property, according to the directions of said instrument. That instrument stood in the way of these creditors in their attempt to reach and apply said property to the satisfaction of their demands. The purpose of the complaint was to show grounds, if any could be shown, why [432]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 P. 371, 12 Mont. 404, 1892 Mont. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teitig-v-boesman-bros-mont-1892.