14 S.E.2d 30 | N.C. | 1941
This was an action upon a judgment rendered in the State of New York. The case was here at Fall Term, 1939, reported in
Thereafter motion was made before the clerk for leave to file an amendment to the answer. The motion was allowed by the clerk and the plaintiff excepted and appealed to the judge. The matter finally came on for hearing at the November Term of the Superior Court of the county before Judge Phillips, who, after hearing the arguments of counsel for plaintiff and defendant, and being of opinion that it would not be in the furtherance of justice to allow the proposed amendment, in his discretion, denied the defendant's motion for leave to file the amendment. *372 The defendant having admitted all the allegations of the complaint, and the demurrer to his affirmative defense having been sustained, the court thereupon rendered judgment on the pleadings for the amount alleged in the complaint. The defendant appealed. This case comes to us upon appeal by defendant from an order of the court below denying his motion for leave to file amendment to his answer, and from judgment on the pleadings for plaintiff.
It was admitted in the pleadings that in an action duly constituted in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, a court of general jurisdiction, wherein Francis A. Cody was plaintiff and Herman W. Booth and George I. Hovey were defendants, judgment was rendered that plaintiff recover of defendant the sum of money alleged. It was also admitted that defendant Hovey was duly served with process in that case, and that he answered, appeared and defended on the merits; that the trial resulted in verdict and judgment for plaintiff; that defendant appealed to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, and that the judgment of the trial court was affirmed, April, 1938. No part of the judgment has been paid. The case is reported, without opinion, in 4 N.Y.S. (2), 187, under the title of "Francis A. Cody v. Herman W. Booth, defendant, impleaded with George I. Hovey, appellant."
The defendant having admitted all the allegations of the complaint, and relying solely upon the affirmative defense set up in his answer, when the demurrer to that defense in the answer was sustained, the defendant was left defenseless, and, nothing else appearing, the plaintiff was entitled to judgment on the pleadings. Therefore, the defendant seeks to have us reverse the ruling of the court below denying his motion for leave to file the amendment to his answer.
The denial of defendant's motion for leave to file amendment to his answer was specifically declared to be in the exercise of the discretion of the court. When discretion to do or not to do an act is vested in the court, its exercise may not be called in question, unless it clearly appears that there has been an abuse of the discretionary power. It was said in Osborne v. Canton, ante, 139: "Decisions of the Court are uniform in holding that after time for answering a pleading has expired, an amendment thereto may not be made as of right, but it is a matter which is addressed to the discretion of the court and its decision thereon is not subject to review, except in case of manifest abuse." Biggs v. Moffitt.
In this case we find nothing in the record before us that would require us to hold that the denial of defendant's motion was characterized by abuse of the judicial discretion vested in the judge below. Hensley v. FurnitureCo.,
The point is made that the clerk, who first heard defendant's motion for leave to file amendment to his answer, allowed the motion, and that the judge heard the matter upon appeal from the ruling of the clerk. But that did not deprive the judge of the power to decide the matter in his discretion when it was properly brought before him. The clerk's ruling, in vacation, upon a motion in a civil action pending in the Superior Court, could not fetter the power of the judge upon appeal duly taken from such ruling. The cause was in the Superior Court and when the matter came before the judge for review his jurisdiction to hear and determine was not derivative. He had the power to consider it de novo. Caldwell v. Caldwell,
Defendant further challenges the correctness of the ruling below on the ground that the appeal from the clerk should have been dismissed for failure to comply with C. S., 635. This position, however, cannot be sustained. It appears that the order of the clerk allowing the motion to amend was dated 18 May, 1940, and the appeal therefrom by the plaintiff was noted at that time. Without objection the appeal was heard at the May Term of the Superior Court of the county by Judge Gwyn, who, after hearing argument by both sides, took the matter under *374 advisement, but did not decide it before leaving the district. Thereafter the case was placed on the calendar and was reached at the November Term, on 2 December, 1940. At that time, without objection, the defendant appeared by counsel and argued the matter before the presiding judge. If there was any irregularity in the procedure by which the appeal came on to be heard by the judge, manifestly defendant has waived any right now to object. The fact that the order setting the matter for hearing 2 December, 1940, was made by the judge out of term is of no consequence, since the parties voluntarily appeared on that date, and full opportunity was afforded defendant to present his cause.
The defendant in his argument in this Court presented the view that his proposed amendment, regardless of the manner and form in which it reached the court, contains allegations of fact which raise the question of the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the cause, and that it was necessary for the court to consider it and to find the facts essential to its jurisdiction before rendering final judgment.
While the court below denied defendant's motion for leave to file the amendment, still, by virtue of the defendant's appeal, the proposed amendment is in the record, and we have examined it and noted the allegations of pertinent facts therein stated. It is substantially alleged that the transactions and dealings upon which the New York judgment was based were purely gambling transactions and gambling contracts, mere wagering upon the rise and fall of the market prices of certain stocks, and that there were no actual purchases or sales or deliveries of securities nor intention that there should be actual purchases or deliveries, nor were the contracts in regard thereto in accord with the rules of any exchange where the securities were dealt in. It is apparent that the transactions, as alleged, come within the definition of transactions and dealings denounced by C. S., 2144. While the gambling transactions described are alleged to have taken place between plaintiff and Herman W. Booth and the connection of this defendant therewith does not appear, it is alleged that the judgment of the New York court against this defendant was based upon those transactions.
The statute, C. S., 2144, after defining gambling contracts, contains this provision: "Nor shall the courts of this state have any jurisdiction to entertain any suit or action brought upon a judgment based upon any such contract." Defendant relies upon this clause in the statute as sufficient to deprive the court of power to entertain plaintiff's action and to render void the judgment entered therein.
It is declared in Art. IV, sec. 1, of the Constitution of the United States that, "Full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the . . . judicial proceedings in every other state," but this would not prevent a state from withdrawing the jurisdiction of its courts from an *375
action to enforce a judgment rendered in another state when it is made to appear clearly that the judgment was awarded on transactions forbidden by the public policy or statute law of the state, and that the question of the illegality of such transactions had not been raised, considered or determined in the court of the original forum. This is the principle enunciated by this Court in Mottu v. Davis,
We quote from the well considered opinion of Hoke, J., in Mottu v.Davis, supra, as follows: ". . . we are clearly of opinion that the legislation relied upon by defendant for his protection (Rev., 1689, now C. S., 2144) is not available for that purpose on the facts presented here, and for the reason indicated, that on pleas properly entered in the Virginia court the very question was raised whether the plaintiff's demand arose out of a gaming transaction, and on investigation had was determined against the defendant; and when this occurs, as indicated in Fauntleroy v.Lum, supra (
The defendant alleged in his proposed amendment that there is no statute in New York comparable to C. S., 2144, and that therefore he could not plead same in defense to the action in the New York court. An examination of the New York statutes, however, reveals that there are general provisions in the statutes of that state declaring all wagers made to depend upon any chance or contingent event to be unlawful, and that all contracts for or on account of any money or property so wagered shall be void. By ch. 40 of the Consolidated Laws of New York (Penal Law), sec. 390, it is provided, in effect, that any person who shall make any contract respecting the purchase or sale of securities or commodities, intending that such contract shall be terminated or settled according to or on the basis of market quotations or prices on any exchange, and without intending a bona fide purchase or sale of same, shall be guilty of a criminal offense. In Weld v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co.,
It is apparent that, under the New York statutes as interpreted by the court of last resort of that state, the plea that the transactions sued on constituted wagering contracts was open to the defendant as a defense if he had opportunity to present it.
Applying these principles of law to the facts shown by the record before us, we reach the conclusion that the ruling of the court below, in its discretion, in denying the defendant's motion for leave to file amendment to his answer, must be upheld, but that the facts alleged in the proposed amendment presented to the court raised questions pertaining to the jurisdiction of the court and its power to render final judgment in the cause. It is in the nature of a plea to the jurisdiction. It cannot be disregarded even though leave to file it as an amendment to an answer was denied. Jurisdiction cannot be conferred by failure of defendant to plead it properly. Randolph v. Heath,
Hence, the cause must be remanded in order that the judge presiding in the court below may find the facts as to whether the plaintiff's claim against defendant Hovey was based upon gambling transactions coming within the definition set out in C. S., 2144, and, if so, whether or not this question was raised by appropriate pleas in the trial of the case in the New York court. If the defendant raised the question by proper plea, and judgment was rendered after investigation had in such case, the judgment would be conclusive here while it stood unreversed in the court where rendered. Mottu v. Davis, supra; Roberts v. Pratt,
So much of the judgment of the court below as denies the motion for leave to file amendment to the answer is affirmed, but the cause is remanded for further proceeding in accord with this opinion.
Error and remanded.