4 Daly 494 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1873
—I entertain no doubt of the power of the court to allow a defendant to amend his answer before trial, by setting up an additional defense, if it be in furtherance of justice. Under the old practice, a plaintiff would not be allowed to amend his declaration if the amendment would change the nature of the action (Cope v. Marshall, Sayre, 234; Duchess of Marlborough v. Wiginan, Fitzg. 193). But the rule was not so strict in respect to amending pleas, or adding a new an«| different plea as a defense to the action, the reason given being that the plaintiff, if he has misconceived the form or nature of his action, can discontinue and bring a new action; whereas the defendant must avail himself of his defense in the action brought' against him (Waters v. Bovill, 1 Wils. 223; Cope v. Marshall, Sayre, 234). The defendant would, therefore, be allowed to amend his pleading at a stage of the case when the plaintiff would not be allowed to amend his declaration (Waters v. Bovill, supra; Skeet v. Woodward, 1 H. Bl. 238), and to amend by setting up a- new defense (Dryden v. Langley, Barnes, 22; Prior v. Duke of Buckingham, 8 Moore, 584; Hubert v. Steiner, 4 Moore & S. 228). The code has not changed the law in this respect. Its provisions, in relation to the amendment of- pleadings, were designed to be more broad and liberal even than the former practice. The codifiers say, in respéct to this very section authorizing the amendment of pleadings and proceedings (then § 149), that their object was (I use their own language) “ to provide a means of amendment of the most liberal character; as liberal, indeed, as we could demise” (First Report of Commissioners, 1848, p. 158).
It was held by the Superior Court, in Woodruff v. Dickie (31 How. Pr. 164; 5 Robt. 619, Chief Justice Barbour dissenting), ■hat under the code the court has no power to allow, by end men t, the insertion of a new or different cause of action "ense. Judge Monell, who delivered the prevailing opinthat neither at common law, nor under any of the
With all due respect for the very able court by whom this decision was rendered, I think the conclusion arrived at was erroneous. The four authorities cited i^ support of it are, with one exception, cases in which the plaintiff applied to amend his declaration by setting up a new cause of action, and are in accordance with the old practice, as I have previously stated it; that an amendment of a declaration would not be X allowed where it would change the nature óf the action. In ^Sachet v, Thompson (2 John. B. 201), the plaintiff asked to substitute for the existing count in the declaration a new count; or if that was not thought proper, to add two other counts. It is not shown in the report what the e|fect of the proposed counts would have been; but it may b<? inferred from the re- . marks of the court, that they amounte'd to setting up a new cause of action. The application was refused, not only upon i this ground, but because it was too late for the plaintiff to ap- ( ply for • an amendment of his declaration ; the old practice /'being that an amendment, amounting to a new count, was not permitted after two terms of the court had elapsed. In the next case cited, Heneshoff v. Miller (Id. 294), the amendment was allowed, as it did not change the nature of the action. In the next case, Williams v. Cooper (1 Hill, 631), which was an action for slander, the defamatory charge was that the defendant had stolen apples, and the amendment asked was to add words which imported that he had stolen boards. This was regarded as adding a distinct, substantive cause of action, not known to the plaintiff when the suit was brought, and, of course, not intended to be declared upon. But, in addition to this, the defamatory charge sought to be added was, when the application was made, barred by the statute of limitations, and to have allowed it then to be incorporated in the declaration by an amendment, would have been to avoid the effect of the stat-in that very case, moreover, it appeared that the defendsbeen allowed, after pleading the general issue, to ar
Judge Moneli in his opinion in this case of Woodruff v. Dickie says thafr'an amendment is the correction of an error or mistake in a pleading already before the court; that there must be something to amend by, and that the insertion of facts constituting a new cause of action or defence, is a substituted pleading and not an amendment'. . This is a very narrow definition of an amendment, and is not warranted either by the -etymology of the word, nor by the practice respecting amendments, as it has existed from the earliest period.
Originally at the common law all pleadings were oral at
The pleadings were “ in paper ” until the record or.rolls for the trial were made up, engrossed, sealed at the Nisi Prius office and docketed (1 Clerk’s Jnst. 153; 2 Tidd’s Pr. 728, 9th ed.)
Up to this time, the engrossment and sealing of the plea and issue rolls, the greatest liberality appears to have prevailed in allowing amendments, especially on the part of the defendant, except where he had interposed a dilatory plea, such as a plea_in_abat_enient (Lepara v. German, 1 Salk. 50), or where by pleading defectively and compelling the plaintiff to demur, the plaintiff had lost a trial (Jordan v. Twells, Cases Temp. Hard. 171). The power was not limited, as Judge Monell supposes, simply to a correction of an error or mistake in a pleading already before the court. Baron Gilbert, the very) highest authority on such a subject, says that it was debated ' amongst the judges at Sergeant’s Inn jvhether a plaintiff could amend his declaration after the defendant demurred and the ¡ plaintiff had joined in demurrer, and he says that their con- j elusion was that he could, if the cause were still in paper, on ,1 payment of costs, liberty being given to the defendant to! change his plea; and he gives the reason as follows : “ Because j the pleading in paper came in only instead of the antient way :: of pleading ore terms j and in the pleading ore tenus the record ? was only in fieri j and therefore though a man had joined in ! demurrer, he might come before that was entered on record and pray to withdraw his demurrer and amend; but after the ; pleadings were entered on record of the same term, then it | could not be altered or amended” .(Gilbert’s Common Pleas,1 pp. 114, 115). That this was the practice appears still more conclusively from a case in 2 Salk. R. 520, in which it is said ; //“ Since pleading in paper is now introduced instead of the old way of pleading ore tenus at the bar, it is but reasonable after a plea to issue or demurrer joined, that, upon payment of costs, the'parties should have liberty to amend their plea, or to waive
In Prussett v. Martin (Gilb. C. P. 113), the plaintiff was allowed to amend by filing a new bill, although there was nothing to amend by; and in the cases already cited (Waters v. Bovill, 1 Wils. 223 ; Dryden v. Langley, Barnes, 22; Prior v. The Duke of Buckingham, 8 Moore, 584; and Herbert v. Steiner, 4 Moo. & Scott, 328), the defendants were allowed to add additional pleadings, setting up separate and distinct defenses.
j The word “ to amend ” has not and never had, either etytmologically or legally, such a restricted sense as the learned judge puts upon it. It came into our language from the French |“ amender,” the root or parent word being menda, a fault, and means in its most comprehensive sense “ to better.” It is so destined by all the leading lexicographers. Thus in Phillip’s Flew 'World of Words, and in Kersey and in Bailey, one of the definitions, is “ to make better by Johnson “ to cha/nge from bad for thebetter / ” by Webster “ to change in any way for the better * * by substituting something else in the place of what is removed.” As a law term, the simple definition of amendment given by Bastall, Cowell or Blount, our earliest expositors of law terms, is the espying out of some error in the proceedings and the correcting of it before judgment and after, if the error be not in the giving of the judgment, the remedy in that case being by writ of error. When, therefore, a defendant is allowed to withdraw a plea or answer, because it does not set up the defense which he has, and put in its stead a plea or answer which does, it is a change for the better, and is therefore an amendment as defined by the lexicographers;
• The courts were at first very strict in permitting amendments of anything that had taken the form of a record, for records in England were made up with great formality, and much importance was attached to their being preserved without
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There is nothing connected with our system of legal procedure that was more wise in its institution, or which has proved more beneficent in its effects, than the extensive power conferred upon the courts to allow amendments; or, after certain stages in the proceeding, to disregard mere technical defects. A due regard to form is essential to the methodical administration of any system of jurisprudence, which is in no? way impaired by a liberal"poligy in permitting amendments, or, where it can be done, by overlooking technical errors or omissions which do not affect the merits. By a too rigid adherence to forms, in refusing to allow those errors and mistakes -to he corrected which are incident to the conduct of all human affairs, legal tribunals evince an unenlightened spirit, and breed a race of technical lawyers who do not aid, hut obstruct the administration of justice, by the exercise of their acuteness in detecting defects whereby they may defeat a just cause of action, or prevent an honest defense. The numerous statutes of jeofails, enacted from the reign of Edw. Ill to that of Geo. I, over-
I might have disposed of the objection raised upon this motion by simply referring to two cases in the Supreme Court (Union National Bank of Troy v. Bassett, 3 Abb. Pr. N. S. 859; Ford v. Ford, 53 Barb. 526),
In the present case, the defendant’s attorney swears that he-had supposed that under his general denial he would be able to set up as a defense that'the plaintiff had forfeited the policy by the breach of the covenant respecting additional insurance; but that he is now advised by counsel that that is very doubtful, and that, to put it beyond question, it is safer to set up that defense specifically in the answer. It is upon this ground that an amendment of the answer is asked for. The application is a reason
Motion granted.
And see McQueen v. Babcock, 3 Keyes, 428.