236 Mass. 460 | Mass. | 1920
This is a bill in equity by which the plaintiff seeks to recover a debt due him from the Hall Motor Truck Company of New England, or from the Dionne Trucking, Inc. The bill alleges that the defendants have no property which may be attached in an action at law. The defendants have admitted the allegations of the bill, and the alleged trustee has answered. As no question of jurisdiction is raised, we proceed to consider the only issue of law presented by the record.
The bill was filed on July 22, 1919, and the Dionne Trucking, Inc. is described therein as the “Dionne Trucking Co., Inc.” A subpoena was served on the trustee Earnshaw on July 28, 1919,
Without reciting all the proceedings in the case, the record shows that a hearing was had in the Superior Court at which the Jenney Manufacturing Company appeared and claimed that the attachment made by it of the funds in the hands of the trustee was valid against the plaintiff in this suit, because of the" misnomer of the Dionne Trucking, Inc. in the bill. The judge filed-a finding of facts, and ordered that a decree be entered directing that the plaintiff be paid $771.25 and taxable costs amounting to $47.84, out of the funds originally in the hands of the trustee, which were afterwards paid to the clerk of the Superior Court, the balance to be held to await the final determination of the action at law brought by the claimant. After the findings were made, the court allowed a motion to amend the bill by striking out the name “Dionne Trucking Co., Inc.” wherever it appeared and substituting therefor “Dionne Trucking, Inc.”; a final decree was entered in accordance with the order and the case is before us on the claimant’s appeal.
The only error in the description of the defendant in the bill was in the insertion of “Co.” after the word “Trucking.” The judge found the following, among other facts: that there was no mistake on the part of the plaintiff as to the corporation intended to be described, that the trustee Earnshaw was not misled by the mistake in the name and knew that “'Dionne Trucking, Inc.’ was the person the plaintiff had in mind as 'The Dionne Trucking Co., Inc.’”; that “From first to last there has been no mistake or misunderstanding on the part of any one as to the person intended to be dealt with under the varied appellations. That person was Dionne Trucking, Inc.”
In view of these findings which, upon the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, we cannot say were unwarranted, we are of opinion that the decree should stand. The amendment did not create an actual change of existing parties, nor did it have the effect of introducing a new demand or a new cause of action; it resulted in the correction of a mere clerical
Decree affirmed with, costs.