117 Mo. App. 462 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
Plaintiffs alleged in their petition that “they are now and at all times hereinafter mentioned were husband and wife and owners of” certain lots-of land in Kansas Gity . . . that defendant Boynton “negligently placed in the alley in the rear of plaintiffs’ said property a large amount of stone, dirt, manure and rubbish, which changed the grade of said alley, rendered the same impassable, prevented access from along said alley . . . and constituted such an obstruction . . . as to cause surface water to be collected . . . and deposited upon plaintiffs’ property.” Damages were laid at $1,500. The city was made a party defendant, but was dismissed at plaintiffs’ request during the progress of
The sole reason upon which defendant seeks a reversal of the judgment is that the record shows on its face that the judgment necessarily was found upon an entirely different cause, of action from that alleged in the petition. The premise assumed by defendant as the predicate for this conclusion is that the petition in alleging that husband and wife were the owners of the land asserted a joint right of action, while the judgment is based upon a right belonging to the wife alone.
In actions on contract, where several are jointly interested in the cause, all must be made parties to the action. The common law rule is thus stated in Andrews’ Stephen’s pleading, section 21, “if there is a non-joinder of one who should be a party plaintiff in an action in form ex contractu,, the consequences at common law were serious, for the defendant, if it appeared on the face of the pleading, might demur, or if the action were upon a deed he could crave oyer of the deed and then demur; or he could plead the non-joinder in abatement; or it could be taken advantage of under the general issue; or if the record and evidence made the non-joinder appear to the court, the defendant might after verdict move in arrest of judgment, or the same might be taken advantage of upon a writ of error.”
But the cause of action pleaded in the petition is not upon contract, but in tort, and there is nothing in the averments of that pleading that fixes the relation of the two plaintiffs with respect to their ownership of the land and, therefore, no allegation of a joint right of action. Under the statement that “plaintiffs are the owners” of the propérty, it would have been just as competent to have introduced proof showing that each plaintiff owned a several interest in the land as it would have been to have proven a joint estate vested in both. And while the several owners of divisible interests — such as tenants in common— ordinarily are required to join in an action for the recovery of damages resulting from a joint injury, the consequences of a non-joinder even at common law were never serious. Defendant was deemed to have waived the objection and cured the defect by failing to raise the point by plea in abatement. So it was held by Judge Scott in Chouteau v. Hewitt, 10 Mo. 1. c. 135, who said; “This being an action ex delicto, and as the non-joinder of the plaintiffs who were omitted
The rule is the same as to actions by tenants in common to recover damages for a joint injury to the land owned by them. [Andrews’ Stephen’s Pleading, sec. 25, et seq.; Chitty on Pleadings (16 Ed.), 74, et seq.; Bullock v. Hayward, 10 Allen 460; Sherman v. Iron Co., 2 Allen 524; True v. Congdon, 44 N. H. 48; Cooper v. Railway, 49 N. H. 209; Bigelow v. Rising, 42 Vt. 678; Alford v. Dewin, 1 Nevada 207; Gilhert. v. Dickerson, 7 Wend. 449; Wheelwright v. Depeyster, 1 Johns. 471; Johnson v. Richardson, 17 Ill. 302.]
Evidently defendant had been misled by an exception to the rule announced by Judge Scott in the foregoing quotation from his opinion. The exception relates to actions for the replevin of chattels and analogous actions for the recovery of damages for the conversion of chattels and was first declared in this State in Smoot v. Wathen, 8 Mo. 522, where the doctrine appears to have been borrowed from Hart v. Fitzgerald, 2 Mass. 510. It has become firmly established in this State. [Seay v. Sanders, 88 Mo. App. 478; Upham v. Allen, 76 Mo. App. 206; Little v. Harrington, 71 Mo. 390.] And it is based upon a very sound reason peculiar to actions in their nature in rem and which is very clearly stated in this extract from the opinion in Hart v. Fitzgerald, supra:
“In replevin which is founded on property, the chattel is to be delivered to the plaintiff, as well as damages to be recovered. This chattel is not capable in law of severance and the whole or none of it can be delivered to the plaintiff; and, if it be delivered to the plaintiff, being but a part owner, he must receive an undivided part, in which he claims no property. In replevin, also, we do not recollect any case in which a part owner can sue for his undivided part only. If property in him and another
In the same opinion the general rule applicable to actions in trespass and of the case is recognized in this language:
“But if there are several part owners of a chattel, and an injury be done it, regularly all the part owners ought to join in an action to recover damages for that injury. In this case, although an injury be done to' each part owner, yet they ought to join, to prevent the defendant from being harassed by a multiplicity of suits. As the rule is established for the defendant’s benefit, he may waive this benefit, by not taking exception in abatement ; and he cannot take advantage of the irregularity under the general issue.”
In the posture of the case before us, we must make every reasonable intendment in favor of the judgment and the regularity of the proceedings leading up to it and under the very comprehensive scope of the statements in the petition that plaintiffs “are the owners” of the property, we find support for proof of a joint cause of action for the enforcement of several rights as distinguished from a joint action for the enforcement of single right jointly owned by several persons. Reasoning from the principles just considered, the dismissal of the husband, even under the hypothesis that he was part owner such as a tenant in common, and proceeding with the action on behalf of the remaining plaintiff was no departure from the cause of action pleaded and, though defendant was entitled to have all the owners of the cause remain in the action, his failure to object to the dismissal of the husband waived the objection and deprived
What we have said follows the assumption that the husband, as stated in the petition, was a part owner of the land, but not necessarily a part owner of a joint right. If he was dismissed from the suit because -it developed at the trial that he had no interest in the cause of action, the rule we have followed would still apply and would be greatly aided by the liberal provisions of section 657, Revised Statutes 1899.
The judgment is affirmed.