Water Power Co. v. McMurray

24 Kan. 62
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 Kan. 62 (Water Power Co. v. McMurray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Water Power Co. v. McMurray, 24 Kan. 62 (kan 1880).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Horton, C. J.:

On June 17, 1878, defendants in error (plaintiffs below) filed a petition in-the district court of Reno county, in the following words and figures (omitting title):

“And now come the said plaintiffs, J. McMurray and C. McMurray, partners as J. & C. McMurray, and complain of the said defendants, the said Water Power company, a corporation duly incorporated under ..the Jaws of the state of Kansas, and C. C. Hutchinson and W. E. Hutchinson, for that on or about the — day of April, 1876, the said defendants, desiring to construct a mill-race.from the Arkansas river [64]*64into the city of Hutchinson, employed these plaintiffs to do a part of said work; that said mill-race was undertaken from a point on the Arkansas river about four miles in a westerly direction from the city of Hutchinson, and runs to Cow creek, and thence to and through a part of the city of Hutchinson, Kansas, and it was on this race these plaintiffs were engaged to work in the construction of the same; that these plaintiffs did a very large amount of work on said race from said Arkansas river to said Cow creek, on the pump and various appliances used in the construction of said race, and in perfecting not only as above stated, from the Arkansas river to said Cow creek, but also on other portions of said race, continuing from April, 1876, to the 25th day of April, 1878; that from time to time, as said work progressed, plaintiffs and defendants met and mutually stated their accounts between these plaintiffs and defendants, and that the following amounts were due to plaintiffs from defendants at the times they each bear dates, to wit:

1. Work done on race from the Arkansas river to Cow creek...§646 93
2. Work done on pump and scraping around flume............... 33 75
3. Work done on head-race, frame mill to pond.................. 333 55
4. Work done on pond and dam....................................... 79 70
5. Work done on dam, and livery in connection therewith..... 356 00

that the above accounts were stated by and between plaintiffs and defendants, as above set forth and agreed to by defendants as aforesaid, and said amounts are now due by defendants to plaintiffs, and unpaid; that said sums- of money amount in the aggregate to the sum of $1,449.93, and became due these plaintiffs on the 25th day of April, 1878, with interest from April 25th, 1878.

Houk & Whítela w, Aliys for Pl’ffs.”

The plaintiff in error (defendant below) filed a motion asking that the plaintiffs be required to make the petition more specific in the following particulars.:

“1. That they state in said petition fully the nature and conditions of the contract mentioned, and the precise time it was made.

“2.* That they state in said petition whether the said contract was in writing, or oral; and if in writing, that they attach a copy thereof to their petition.

“3. That they designate in their said petition the date at which the alleged stating of accounts took place.

“ 4. That they show what proportion of said fifth and last item was work, and what livery.”

[65]*65The court overruled the motion, and this is the first alleged error.

It is stated in Chitty’s Pleadings that it is advisable in all declarations in assumpsit for the recovery of a money demand, (excepting against an infant, who cannot in law state an account,) to insei’t a count on an account stated. It seems to us, from an examination of the petition, that the pleader attempted to follow somewhat this old rule of pleading, and ingeniously prepared his allegations to recover on an account stated, and upon a failure to pro.ve a certain and precise sum was admitted to be due by the defendants, to fall back upon the proof of the general allegations in the petition, and recover the amount claimed, or any smaller sum, as upon an account. Had the plaintiffs below- relied solely upon an account stated, the only allegations requisite to set forth this form of action would have been:., 1. That the plaintiffs and defendants accounted together; 2. That, on such accounting, the defendants were found to be in the plaintiffs’ debt; 3. That defendants promised to pay the same; 4. That they have not done so.

. While we are of the opinion -that-'the usual manner of pleading a stated account, like the familiar allegations that the plaintiff had “bargained and sold,” or “sold and delivered,” that the “defendant was indebted to the plaintiff,” or “had and received money to the plaintiff’s use,” within the authorities of other states where they have codes similar to ■ours, is sufficient under our code, as it was under the practice before the code, yet if the defendant is likely to be embarrassed in his defense by such “common counts,” and objects to the plea in this form, he can, under the code (§119), require the pleading to be'made definite and certain. The express words of the code are, that “the petition must contain a statement of the facts ■ constituting the cause of action, in ordinary and concise language, and without repetition.” It is the purpose, therefore, of our system of pleading, that facts, and not law, must be alleged. The very ■object and design of all pleading by the plaintiff is, that [66]*66the adverse party may be informed of the real cause of action, and may thus have an opportunity of meeting and' defeating it, if possible, at the trial. Frankness and truthfulness are commendable at all times, and under all circumstances, and as much so in pleadings as elsewhere. Uuder the practice before the code, the original form of the debt or items of account were of no importance at all in an action of indebitatus assumpsit, for an account stated, and the time of the accounting, need not have been alleged; but under the code, if the defendant wishes to take advantage of any want of certainty, precision, definiteness or consistency in the allegations of the charge, he may, by motion, attack the same, and require it to be amended. In this way, a plaintiff can be compelled to disclose the facts of his real cause of action; to set forth his special contract, if he has one; to state specifically the items of an account; and, under some circumstances, the time of accounting. In this way, the courts have it in their power, by encouraging these classes of motions, and by treating them as highly remedial and important, notwithstanding the many authorities sanctioning the use of the “common counts,” to shape the pleading into harmony with the words and spirit of the code. (Meagher v. Morgan, 3 Kas. 372.) Therefore, whether we regard the petition as an account stated, or an account and an account stated blended together, the trial court ought to have compelled the petition to be amended, as requested in the first, second, third and fourth specifications of the motion, in order that the precise nature of the claim against the Water Power company might have been clearly apparent, and the defendants unincumbered in their defense. The corporation and two individuals were sued together, and it was manifestly important to the corporation to be informed whether any special agreement at estimated prices was to be relied upon; also, if the contract was in writing, by which of its officers and agents it was signed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Kan. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/water-power-co-v-mcmurray-kan-1880.