28 N.J.L. 479 | N.J. | 1860
The plaintiff brought his action to recover thirty-seven penalties, alleged to have been incurred by so many violations of the act to prevent accidents from the use of locomotive engines on railroads, and the supplement thereto.
Upon demurrer, filed by the defendants, the first count was sustained, and judgment rendered thereupon against the defendants, with leave to plead anew.
As to the other counts, the demurrer was sustained, and those .counts adjudged to be defective in substance, and a motion to amend the same was denied.
To review the judgment of the court below on the last thirty-six counts, the writ of error is brought.
These counts were held to be defective for want of averment that the alleged offences were committed against the form of any statute. The first count sets forth .certain statutes. In these thirty-six, the only reference to the statutes is in the introductory part of each count, in which it is averred that the defendants, not regarding the said statutes, nor fearing -the penalties therein contained, at certain -times, did run one of their locomotive engines on their railway across a certain highway, therein -de
That each count must show', either directly or by explicit reference to the averments of a preceding count, the statute under which tiro penalty is claimed, and aver that the act complained of was contrary to the form of that statute, is uot at this day to be questioned, nor, indeed, do the counsel of the plaintiff deny it; but they insist, that the title of the statutes having been set out in the first count, the reference to them in the introductory part of the other counts is sufficient.
It is said that the reference to that is equivalent to the formal averment of “ contra forrnam statuti.”
The action is for penalties, and the manner in which they were incurred must be explicitly stated.
In the statement, that the defendants not regarding the said statutes, nor fearing their penalty, committed the act, ’t is obvious that allusion is made to the statutes mentioned m the first count, but there is a failure to aver that the act was done in violation of them.
It is not enough that the defendants may have a hint of the statutes under which they are sued, nor that they be put upon inquiry in relation to them ; they are entitled to a distinct and clear statement of the statutes which they are charged to have violated, and to be directly informed that it is for the violation of those statutes that the penalties are claimed.
Such was the conclusion of the court below, and in that conclusion I can see no error.
It is further objected that the plaintiff should have been allowed to amend his declaration in the particulars named, and this is assigned for error.
If the granting or refusing of a motion to amend is a matter of discretion, as it clearly was before the passage of the act to facilitate pleadings (Nixon 635), it is not assign
In this ease tbe Court of Common Pleas had refused to continue a cause, although there was an irregularity in the service of notice of trial, and this court held that it was nqt a ground of reversal on a writ or error, and recognised the doctrine as expressed in the case of Wright v. Lessee of Hollingsworth, 1 Peters' U. S. R. 168, where it is declared thus:
“ The allowance or refusal of amendments in the pleadings, the granting or refusal of new trials, and, indeed, most other incidental orders made in the progress of a cause before trial, are matters so peculiarly addressed to the sound discretion- of the courts of original jurisdiction as to be fit for their decision only under their-rules and modes of practice. This, it is true, may occasionally lead to particular hardships ; but on the other hand, the general inconvenience of this court attempting to revise and correct ail intermediate proceedings in suits between their commencement and final judgment would be intolerable. This court has always declined interfering in such cases. Accordingly it was held, in Wood v. Young, 4 Cranch 237, that the re fusal óf a court below to continue a cause after it is at issue, is .not a matter in which error can be assigned ; that the refusal of the court below to grant a new trial is no, a matter for which a writ of error lies; 5 Cranch 11; Ib. 187; and 10 Wheaton 220; and that the refusal of a court to allow a plea to be amended or a new plea filed, or to grant a new trial, or to continue a cause, cannot be assigned as a cause of reversal or a writ of error.”
In the exercise of such a discretion, the court, in Evans qui tam v. Stephens, 4 T. R. 459, and in Holland qui tam Bothmar, Ib. 228, refused to leave to amend the declara tion. In Saxby v. Hirkers, Sayer 117, an action against bail, and in Noble v. King et al., 1 Henry Bl. 37, a hard action, brought against executors in their own right, who ap
On the same principle, to a defendant, after the plaintiff has lost a trial, a motion to amend was refused. Hawk. 171.
But it is insisted that amendment is now a matter -of right ; that the 23d section of the act to facilitate pleadings is imperative, and requires, a rule to amend in every case in which the party may ask it.
That section provides that no pleading shall be deemed insufficient for any defect which could theretofore have been objected to only by special demurrer; and when issue is formed on any demurrer the court shall give judgment according to the very right of the canse and matter in law shall appear, without regarding any imperfection, omission, defect in, or lack of form, and that no judgment shall be arrested, stayed, or reversed for any such imperfection, omission, defect, or lack of form.
This section clearly relates to mere matters of form, such as were before the subject of examination through the means of a special demurrer only. It was designed to dls pense with special demurrers, and with that view it quotes the very language used in the 12th section of the act respecting amendments and jeofails (Nix. 9) which relates to special demurrers.
The 23d section of the act to facilitate pleadings provides that no advantage shall be taken of such defects, whether specially set down for cause of demurrer or not; and the concluding paragraph of the section confirms this view, by declaring that no judgment shall be arrested, stayed, or reversed for such imperfection.
It will not he insisted that a judgment may not now be arrested, stayed, or reversed for defect in substance in like manner as it would have been before the passage of that tict. Yet, if that 23d section relate to matters of substance, tRere can be no arr >st it judgment or reversal for any de feet in the record whatsoever.
If this view of this case is correct, the refusal to allow an amendment was proper and lawful, and if it was not, it is no ground of error, and cannot be reviewed here.
Let the judgment be affirmed, with costs.
Van Dyke, J., concurred.
Cited in Brunch v. Carter, 3 Vr. 557; Murphy v. Montclair, 10 Vr. 675.