80 Vt. 505 | Vt. | 1908
The plea alleges in substance that the plaintiff by her deed in writing under her hand and seal released and discharged the defendant from the cause of action sued upon, and covenanted and agreed that at the next succeeding term the suit should be entered “settled and discontinued,” and makes proferí of said deed.
The replication alleges in substance that the plaintiff made said supposed deed of release and delivered it to one Gareeau, on condition and in consideration that the defendant then promised that he would make and deliver to the plaintiff a like deed of release discharging the plaintiff to the same extent, and would deliver to the plaintiff the pleas prepared in the case, and would leave five hundred dollars with Gareeau for the plaintiff by a time stated, and that both parties should treat such agreement as strictly confidential; and alleges further that the parties were to meet at Gareeau’s office at th'e time stated, and that Gareeau was then to deliver said money to the plaintiff and said supposed deed of release to the defendant, but that
The replication is demurred to; and special causes of demurrer are assigned, which are in substance, that it does not answer the plea, either by a general form of denial or by a denial of any single material fact; that it advances new matter, and thereby sets forth a contract different from that stated in the plea, and so amounts to the general issue; and that it does not confess and avoid any material allegation of the plea.
The plaintiff claims that the plea is defective in that it fails to allege a delivery of the deed of release; and that if it be held that a delivery of the deed is sufficiently alleged, the plea is double, in that it sets úp a release of the cause of action and a covenant to discontinue the suit; and that inasmuch as the plea is bad, it is sufficiently answered by the -replication, even though that be defective. The demurrer reaches all the pleadings, but has the force of a general demurrer only, as applied to pleadings prior to the one demurred to. So it reaches only substantial defects in the plea, and if a delivery of the release is argumentatively alleged the plea is sufficient, for argumentativeness and duplicity are but defects of form. We think a delivery of the deed of release is argumentatively alleged. The allegation is not that the plaintiff made a deed releasing the defendant, but that by her deed she released him, which implies a delivery. So the plea is sufficient, and if the replication stands it must be upon its merits.
The plaintiff argues that the replication is a proper plea of confession and avoidance; that the matters set up in avoidance
It should be noticed at the outset that the matters set up as occurring subsequently to the execution of the release are not matters that arose independently of -the contract as the replication alleges it to have been made.' These subsequent occurrences, as alleged, were merely breaches of an agreement under which the deed of release was made and deposited. The replication alleges a delivery to a third person to be held for delivery to the defendant when certain conditions were complied with, and a possession wrongfully obtained, without such compliance, and avers in conclusion that such supposed deed of release is not the plaintiff’s deed.
A plea of confession and avoidance must at least give color to the matter to which it is applied; that is, it must so far conféss the matter adversely alleged as to give the opposite party an apparent right — it must contain at. least an implied admission that the allegations to be avoided are true. Dunklee v. Goodenough, 65 Vt. 257; Baker v. Sherman, 75 Vt. 88. It follows that a plea of confession and avoidance which in effect denies the existence of the claim it opposes is defective. The plea rests upon the confession, for if there is no such adverse claim there is nothing requiring new matter in avoidance. Connected with this rule, and largely depending upon it, is the doctrine that a special .plea amounting to the general issue is bad. 1 Chitty 526. A plea which sets up in reply a different contract from the one alleged is bad for this reason. It is an argumentative denial of what the adverse pleader must prove to sustain his claim. Kimball v. Railroad Co., 55 Vt. 95; Hayselden v. Staff, 5 A. & E. 153.
The allegation of the replication that the plaintiff made the supposed deed of release pleaded by the defendant is not sufficient to give color. The plaintiff’s brief proceeds upon the theory that the deed of release went into effect and was made inoperative by subsequent occurrences, but the allegations of the replication show that the deed never became operative. The replication sets forth a contract which led to the preparation of a deed of release,. but the contract as set forth is entirely
Judgment reversed; demurrer overruled as to the plea and plea adjudged sufficient; demurrer sustained as to the replication and that adjudged insufficient; and cause remanded.