3 Wash. 654 | Wash. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by appellant Davis upon two certain promissory notes of one thousand dollars each, given by defendants F. Erickson and Chas. Erickson, on the 8th day of November, 1890, with interest at the
The form of the demurrer is objected to by the appel
The plaintiff, according to his own complaint, was neither the owner of the notes nor entitled to the possession of them. All the interest he had in the notes was the balance over the amount necessary to pay his debt to the bank, and for that amount the bank was his trustee. Notes assigned for security would be of very little practical benefit to the assignee if the assignor conld proceed to collect them after the assignment. The appellant insists that he was providing a remedy for the bank by asking the court to decree a lien on the judgment in favor of the bank for the amount of the bank’s interest in the notes. But the interest of the bank could not possibly be affected, or any right' that it had in the notes changed into a lien on some other property, or in any manner determined in this action, for the simple reason that it was in no sense a party to the action, and there had been no attempt to make it such. The allegation that the defendants would not pay the amount due on these notes to the plaintiff is a meaningless allegation, for, according to the complaint, the bank was the payee and the only party to whom the notes could be paid; and
The appellant also assigns as error the action of the court in refusing to allow him to file a supplemental complaint, and relies on § 114 of the code, which provides that the court may, on motion, allow supplemental pleadings, as showing facts which accrued after-the former pleadings were filed. This so-called supplemental complaint, however, we think, was not a supplemental complaint at all. It is true that it showed a fact which occurred after the original, complaint had been filed, viz.: That the notes had been paid in full by the defandants to the bank; that the bank had applied so much of the proceeds thereof as would fully pay and discharge the note due the bank by plaintiff, and had paid over to the plaintiff the balance thereof on the 27th day of May, 1891. And it is alleged that no attorney’s fees had been paid on said notes, and that there was’ a collusion between the bank and the payors of the note, the defendants in the action, to prevent appellant from obtaining judgment for his attorney’s fees. But if the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to this complaint, ■ and the appellant had no cause of action against the defendants, they certainly had a right to make payment to the bank, and to pay their notes without the payment of attorney’s fees; and the matters and things set up in appellant’s complaint would not constitute a cause of action, and if it did it would be a new cause of action, entirely in
But back of all this, the right to file supplemental pleadings, or amendments of any kind, is largely discretionary with the court, and the action of the court will only be reviewed for an abuse of discretion. In this case the demurrer to the complaint was sustained on the 13th day of .June, and plaintiff was given twenty days in which to file .an amended complaint, but no complaint was filed within ■that time. In fact, the record shows that no complaint had been filed on the 20th day of July, nearly three weeks after the time allowed by the court, at which time the defendants moved for judgment on the demurrer, and no notice of an intention to ask leave to file an amended complaint was given until the 15th day of August, more than forty days after the time gr'anted had expired, and no application for further time had been made. Neither is there any attempt to justify the delay. In fact, the supplemental complaint shows that there could have been no justification, for it alleges that the matters and things set up therein came to appellant’s notice on the 27th of May, two weeks prior to the ruling of the court on the demurrer. We think there was no error of the court in not allowing the appellant to file a supplemental complaint.
For the reasons given, the judgment is affirmed.
Anders, O. J., and Hoyt, Scott and Stiles, JJ., concur.