41 P.2d 527 | Wyo. | 1935
A petition for rehearing has been filed herein by defendants. Opportunity to answer the contentions therein was given to counsel for plaintiffs. Neither the trial court, nor this court, have been able to convince counsel for defendants that this case is entirely different from Quinlan v. St. John,
We sparingly considered the subject of pleadings in the original opinion. We pointed out the reasons therefor. But a great portion of the petition for rehearing, and the brief in support thereof, is devoted thereto, so that we feel that we cannot escape going into it to a greater extent.
Counsel take exception to the statement that the evidence in the case was admitted without objection. The statement was of minor importance, and for brevity's sake we but stated the result, without stating how we arrived at it. Perhaps we should have done so. It is true that at the opening of the trial the appellants interposed a demurrer ore tenus, that is to say, they objected to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that the petition fails to state a cause of action. The objection was not then ruled on, but was taken under advisement. We have, after diligent search, been unable to find that the court ever made a ruling, notwithstanding the fact that the abstract of the record, citing page 35 of the record, states the contrary. Nor do we find that the trial court was thereafter asked to make a ruling. It has been held in a number of cases that under these circumstances the objection is waived. St. Louis etc. Co. v. Brown,
Even though the system of Code pleading has been in existence for the period of over three quarters of a century, we find a lack of uniformity in the decisions of the courts as to when, and under what circumstances, a pleading should, after judgment, be held to be fatally defective or otherwise. While, at first blush, that seems surprising, it should, perhaps, not be so, when we bear in mind that "there is in all systems of law a perpetual struggle between the principle of rigidity, which makes for certainty, and that of flexibility, which makes for justice in the individual case," and that the subject under discussion is but illustrative of that struggle. Among the principal contenders engaged therein are the legislatures and the members of the bar. Courts have generally been conservative, as shown, for instance, by the rule of stare decisis, and instead of being the main contenders, they, to a large extent, but record the ultimate conclusions arrived at, though not without dissension, by others who keep up the struggle. Until, then, definite rules on the subject before us have been adopted in this state, we cannot afford to be dogmatic about it. We cannot say ipsedixit and let it go at that, for there seem to be too many masters. Hence we can but hope that, with the aid of the members of the bar, if they will extend it, we may be able to maintain a path of the golden mean.
The rule is general, of course, that a petition must state a cause of action, and we are not unmindful of what has been said in regard thereto in previous decisions of this court. The point that it does not do so is never waived and may be raised even in this court. Nichols v. Weston County,
"Had the demurrer been sustained, the petition would presumably have been amended by supplying the omitted facts, and the trial could have proceeded as it in fact did. The issue which the omitted facts would have tendered if they had been pleaded was in fact tried to all intents as fully as if the omission had not occurred. We cannot, therefore, regard the error in the ruling on the demurrer as prejudicial to the defendant, but will consider the petition as amended in this particular."
The case does not indicate whether the evidence was admitted without objection or not. We may assume here that no objection was made. There are innumerable instances, however, in which courts have brushed errors aside as not prejudicial, notwithstanding that objections were made in the trial court. That was true, for example, in Sherwood v. Land Co.,
This court has not, we think, committed itself against the more liberal rule, although there are expressions in some of the earlier cases which would indicate the contrary. In Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Kahn,
3. One of the grounds urged as showing that the petition herein fails to state a cause of action is the allegation therein that Mrs. Claughton obtained the property in controversy for an inadequate consideration. We shall assume with counsel for defendants that an allegation in that form is a conclusion of law, and that a proper allegation in that connection was an essential requisite. The record, however, shows that, as part of the evidence of defendants, their counsel caused it to be stipulated by the parties that the actual consideration paid was the sum of $25.00. We stated in the original opinion that "it would, accordingly, be highly technical to reverse the case, simply to have the petition amended in that respect." This statement is challenged, and that emphatically. We deemed it to be so self-evident that we did not cite any authority in support thereof, and we are, in fact, somewhat surprised that counsel, able as we know them to be, take a different view. The statement is, in substance, correct. Many authorities sustain it, and we *548
have found none to the contrary, except Wells v. Mut. Ben. Ass'n.,
4. A further reason given by defendants that the petition herein is fatally defective is the statement that it fails to offer to do equity. The authorities seem to be hopelessly divided on the question as to whether or not such an offer is necessary. Some of them hold that it is not, and others hold that a petition failing to allege such offer is demurrable. 21 C.J. 400. In the case at bar, plaintiffs, in the petition, offered to pay the sum of $25.00, being the last installment due on the contract, but made such offer to the Realty Company, which was the wrong party. But the plaintiffs did not ask for an unconditional conveyance of the property to the partnership (subject only to such payment), but asked for such conveyance "upon such terms and conditions as the court may deem just and equitable." From this we may by inference gather that plaintiffs were willing to comply with such terms and conditions — in other words, that they were willing to do equity. It is, accordingly, doubtful that the petition in that respect was subject to anything more than a motion for more specific statement. Pomeroy, Code Remedies (5th Ed.), Sec. 443. No demurrer was interposed herein, nor was a motion made to have the petition amended for a more specific statement. While a defendant has the right to raise at any time the objection that a complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, the longer this objection is delayed, the less favorably should it be viewed by the court. Boltz v. Bonner, (Colo.)
5. The evidence shows that Mrs. Claughton paid nine installments due on the contract of purchase herein, each of $25.00, making a total of $225.00, in addition to the payment of $25.00 when the deed to her was executed. The total is computed by counsel for appellants at $25.00, though it is perhaps somewhat greater. The decree of the trial court left these amounts in an uncertain situation, and we deemed it best to have the decree modified so that A. Claughton would get the benefit of these payments on the final *551 dissolution of the partnership. We think that we did not go far enough. Counsel have called our attention to the fact that a brother of the plaintiff Frank Johnson has a large judgment against the partnership and that he, accordingly, and not the partnership and A. Claughton may ultimately get the benefit of the payments made by Mrs. Claughton. The particular person who might get such benefit does not matter. But the possibility or probability that some third person would reap all the advantages from such payments should, we think, be taken into consideration. It is true that, as pointed out in the original opinion, the payments which Mrs. Claughton made were, according to her testimony, made for the benefit of her husband. Nevertheless, it also shows that they were not made solely for his benefit. She at times used the plural "we." Her very relationship to A. Claughton suggests the fact that she made the payments for her own protection and her own ultimate benefit as well. We are, therefore, convinced, upon further consideration, that counsel for appellants are right in this connection, and that equity demands that she should receive back the amounts which she advanced. If these amounts should accrue to the benefit of a third party, the fundamental purpose for which she paid them would be wholly and completely frustrated. And the danger or possibility of that suggests and we think requires, that this should not be made possible.
We think, accordingly, that the decree of the trial court should be modified to the effect that the plaintiffs pay, or cause to be paid, to Mrs. A. Claughton, within ninety days from this date, the amounts paid out by her on the property involved herein, in the sum of $250, together with legal interest thereon from February 1, 1933; she at the same time delivering a proper conveyance of the property involved herein to the partnership, *552 and that upon her refusal to accept such payment or to make such conveyances, upon the condition aforesaid, the title to the property be declared to be held in trust for the partnership, and to be in fact the property of such partnership, free and clear of any claims of Mrs. Claughton; if, however, the said sum of money is not paid or tendered to her within the time above specified, then that the petition herein be dismissed. The trial court may make and enter such additional orders, if necessary, to effectuate the general purposes herein above expressed, and may to that end, if it deems it just, modify the time herein fixed for the payment and conveyance above mentioned. As so modified, the judgment is affirmed and a rehearing denied.
KIMBALL, Ch. J., and RINER, J., concur.