77 S.E. 770 | N.C. | 1913
This action was brought in WAKE by the plaintiff, a nonresident corporation, against the defendant, also a nonresident corporation, and it is alleged in the complaint substantially:
1. That the defendant, on 14 December, 1885, conveyed to Albemarle and Pamlico Colonization Company, with covenant of warranty, a certain tract of land in the county of Tyrrell, in the State of North Carolina, and which is particularly described in the complaint.
2. That plaintiff has acquired all the right, title, and interest of the said Colonization Company by mesne conveyances.
3. That defendant, "by its agents, employees, and servants, entered upon said tract of land and cut and removed therefrom a large quantity of valuable timber trees standing and growing thereon, and converted the same to its own use, the value of the timber so cut and removed being more than $90,000."
4. That said cutting and removal was done in such a manner and with so little regard to the value of the young timber trees standing and growing on the land and to its effect upon the land itself, that the land and the freehold therein were greatly damaged as a result thereof, to the amount of $10,000. *493
5. That the deed of the defendant has been lost, and the registry thereof in Tyrrell County shows that no seal of the (606) grantor was affixed to his name subscribed thereto, whereas a seal was actually affixed to his name on the original deed.
Plaintiff also alleges a breach of the covenant of warranty by cutting and removing the trees and damaging the land, but there is no allegation of an eviction from the premises by any one under title paramount.
Defendant requested in due time that the case be removed for trial to the county of Tyrrell, alleging that to be its proper venue, and also asked for a removal upon the ground of the convenience of witnesses and readier access to the records of that county. The motion was denied. Defendant excepted and appealed.
After stating the case: That an appeal lies from an order denying a motion for the removal of a case to the proper county for trial has been thoroughly settled by repeated decisions of this Court.Manufacturing Co. v. Brower,
We may add that relief is now administered upon the allegations fairly, reasonably, and even liberally construed in aid of the pleader, without regard to the form of the prayer, or even if there is no prayer corresponding with the allegations, or one that misconceives the remedy.Voorhees v. Porter,
Testing the complaint in this case by these principles, we think plaintiff intended to sue for a trespass on its land in Tyrrell County, and the allegation of a conversion, as was said in Ellenwood v. Chair Co.,supra, and Telegraph Co. v. Middleton, supra, was inserted in aggravation of damages. Sure it is that plaintiff does sue, at least in part, for a pure trespass and injury to the freehold, in so many words, and actions requiring different places of trial cannot be joined. Revisal, (613) sec. 469 (7). But if, by the most liberal construction, we can find an allegation, if properly made, upon which an action, in the nature of trover for a conversion of the trees, can be based, we should set aside the order of the court as erroneous and remand the case, so that the parties may amend or replead; and we believe this to be the just and safe course to pursue, and one at least in accord with the more modern and practical system of pleading and procedure. But before doing so, we refer to another aspect of this case that may be worthy of attention.
The defendant is a foreign corporation, and so is the plaintiff, both having their places of business in their domicile of origin, Virginia, as the complaint alleges. It does not appear in the case that defendant, being a foreign corporation, "usually did business" in Wake County, or that it had any property therein, or that the plaintiff resides in said county. The implication is that none of these facts existed, and if so, the Revisal, sec. 423, may require that the action should be tried in Tyrrell County, where the cause of action arose. As is said in the cases above cited, plaintiff must elect whether to sue in tort, for the trespass, or for the conversion, or, if the trees have been sold, in assumpsit for money had and received to its use, where the question of venue is *499 involved. The plaintiff should be permitted to amend its complaint, if in its judgment an amendment will avail anything in view of the provisions of Revisal, sec. 423, and the defendant should have the like privilege of amending the affidavit, upon which its motion for removal is based, if so advised to do, so that the facts, under Revisal, sec. 423, may appear more clearly and not merely by inference. We do not intend to say that causes of action in tort and in contract may not be joined, for they may be under the provisions of Revisal, sec. 469, but under that section and subsection they must belong to one of the classes enumerated in section 469, must affect all parties, must be separately stated, "and must not require different places of trial." Plaintiff cannot deprive defendant of the right to have a local cause of action tried in the proper county, or change the venue to the prejudice of the defendant and against his will, by uniting (614) two causes of action having different venues. This does not apply to actions for foreclosure of mortgages. Defendant would have the right to demur for misjoinder, but this right cannot be exercised until after he moves to change the venue, as the latter motion must come before pleading to the merits. Revisal, sec. 425. Where causes of action have been improperly joined and there is no waiver by failing to demur upon this ground, the court may order the action to be divided upon demurrer (Revisal, sec. 476), and we do not see why this should not be done, when they have been improperly joined, because triable in different places, if there is a motion in due time to remove to the proper county and before a demurrer is due in the regular course of pleading. But all that has been thus far said is subject, of course, to the provisions of Revisal, sec. 423, if ultimately found to be applicable. The court may still, in its discretion, entertain a motion to change the venue under Revisal, sec. 425.
There is no sufficient allegation of a breach of the covenant of warranty, as it does not appear that there has been an ouster or eviction under a superior title. Britton v. Ruffin,
The order is set aside and the case remanded for the purposes aforesaid.
Reversed.
Cited: Bryan v. Canady,
(615)