44 A. 10 | Conn. | 1899
In the former action between these parties (Botsford v. Wallace,
The main object of the present action is to reform the deed of December 17th, 1883, by making it what the parties to it intended it should be; the averment being that the defendant bought with notice of the plaintiff's equity.
In one suit the plaintiff declared that he had a legal title; in the other he declares that he has none, but that the defendant is equitably bound to give him one.
These causes of action are radically different, and the demurrer to the "first defense" should have been sustained. *199
The "third defense" rested on the legal effect of the deed from Lorenzo Lewis under which the passway was originally created. The complaint alleged an agreement on the part of Lewis' successor in title to surrender any reserved rights and make the right to use the passway absolute and unconditional. If there was such an agreement, and the defendant purchased with notice, equity would require him to abide by it, and the fact that the plaintiff had no legal title would be the very reason why he should be given one by order of court. There was also error, therefore, in overruling the demurrer to this defense.
It is urged that in the pleadings in the former action the defendant set up in his rejoinder that he was a purchaser without notice, and that the plaintiff, by not denying this allegation, admitted its truth, and so is precluded from now raising the same question again. Such would be the case, if the questions were the same. But the averment thus admitted to be true was that there was "no agreement in writing between Lewis A. Young and Mary E. Lewis" for her releasing her right to use the twenty foot space, so as yet to leave the right to use the passway in full force in favor of Young and his assigns; and that the defendant bought without notice of "any such agreement." The present action counts on no agreement in writing, but on notice of one resting in parol, evidence of which was properly excluded in the former suit.
The division of the answer into three separate defenses, each entitled as a separate piece of pleading, was unnecessary. Our Practice Act has more resemblance to the English Judicature Act than to the codes of civil procedure of most of the States of the United States. Its great object was simplicity. With this view it discarded the technical formalities of pleading at common law, and followed in the main the practice in equity. Each party is to tell his story in plain and concise terms, and to divide it into short paragraphs. General Statutes, § 880. The denial of any paragraph, containing a material allegation, constitutes an issue of fact. No issue is to be joined on a demurrer. Practice Book, p. 17, § 12. Different and distinct causes of action, if joined in one suit, should be *200
set out in separate counts, and in such case matters of defense appropriate to one of them only are to be separately pleaded. Ib. § 8; Craft Refrigerating Machine Co. v. Quinnipiac BrewingCo.,
An answer in chancery often contained matters in avoidance, some of which were untrue and others impertinent or insufficient. The defendant could except to the latter and deny the former. He had no right to ask for a separation between them, so that those of each description should be grouped into a separate and single defense or piece of pleading. However advisable, in early days of English history, it might have been to divide up legal pleas in this way, so as to narrow the issue to a single point easily to be comprehended by a jury, the courts of chancery saw no occasion for embarrassing their own procedure by such artificial refinements. They preferred to have the parties state their case in the natural way. Any point of law which might thus appear could be taken up separately and, if disclosed on the face of the bill, would properly be raised by a demurrer; but such a demurrer rarely ran against the whole pleading.
The present practice in the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice, under the orders of court resting on the Judicature Act, is even simpler. No demurrer is allowed. If either party disagrees with the other as to the legal effect of an allegation in the "statement of claim" or "statement of defense," he asks to have the point of law thus raised set down for argument. Its disposition may simply clear the way for a trial of the facts, or it may control the judgment. Thus, in a case arising soon after the promulgation of the Orders of Court of 1883, by which demurrers are abolished, the plaintiff alleged that the defendant held certain lands under a devise absolute in terms, but really subject to a secret *201 trust which was void under the law of mortmain. He therefore sued as the heir of the devisor to enforce a resulting trust. The "statement of defense" (a single piece of pleading) was, first, that there was no secret trust, and, second, that if any, it was valid under a certain statute of 43 George III. The plaintiff had the point of law thus raised set down for argument. It was decided against him, and thereupon final judgment was rendered for the defendant. O'Brien v.Tyssen, L. R. 28 Ch. Div. 372. It is these principles of equity pleading that our Practice Act has preferred to the rigid and artificial methods of the common law. General Statutes, § 877.
We have given this explanation of their application at greater length than might otherwise have seemed necessary, had not the present case been one of several which have recently come up on appeal, in which the provisions of the Practice Act have been disregarded in a way indicating a radical misapprehension of their purpose and effect in unifying and simplifying all pleadings in civil actions.
In the case at bar it was claimed in defense, that by excluding the defendant's grantors from any use of the twenty foot back yard, the plaintiff had destroyed his right of way, if any he ever had; that this had been decided in the former case; and also that several of the averments in the complaint were untrue. In one sense these are several and separate defenses. In another, they are one general answer to the plaintiff's case, and as such they could be most simply presented and most conveniently considered if grouped together, under suitable paragraphs, in a single and otherwise undivided statement.
There was no error in sustaining the demurrer to the fourth claim for relief. If the defendant had placed a building on land of the plaintiff, there was adequate remedy at law. This was not the particular ground upon which it was sustained, but it was properly presented and supports the judgment.
That the building had been erected pending the suit was not, of itself, any bar to a claim for an injunction against its continued maintenance. Enfield Toll Bridge Co. v. Hartford N. H.R. Co.,
There was error in disallowing the amendment adding a claim *202
for damages. It is true that for a wrong committed pending the suit, by building upon the plaintiff's land, they could not properly be awarded. Woodbridge v. Pratt WhitneyCo.,
The plaintiff lost any right to a review of the ruling that the original complaint was insufficient, when he filed his substituted complaint. Goodrich v. Stanton,
There is error, the judgment is set aside, and the cause remanded with directions to vacate the order disallowing the addition of the fifth claim for relief, and to allow the same, and to reverse the orders overruling the demurrer to that part of the answer contained in the first and third defenses.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.