10 How. Pr. 193 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1854
The case made by the complaint was substantially this: that the defendant Wicker conveyed the property, which is the subject of the controversy here, to his co-defendant Boyer, and gave him a good title; that the plaintiffs purchased of Boyer, and advanced the purchase money to him, relying wholly upon his representation that the property was entirely free from incumbrance ; that, in point of fact, Boyer’s representation was false, and that he had previously executed a mortgage to Wicker on the premises, for a large amount, which was without consideration, and which was to be used only in case the property could not be sold, and then only with
The plaintiff, in the amendments he now desires to have made, asks to change the entire gravamen and essence of the complaint, by inserting, in the first place, an averment that the deed from Wicker to Boyer was made with a view to delay, hinder and defraud the creditors of Wicker, thus attacking the very conveyance which was originally affirmed, and under which he derived title. He asks, furthermore, to be allowed to allege that, by a fraudulent arrangement between Boyer and Wicker, the mortgage was not to be placed on record until after the deed should be recorded, and the negotiations for a sale of the property had so far progressed, that it would be too late to search the records ; whereas, in the original complaint, there is no allegation that Wicker had any agency whatever in withholding the mortgage from the record, and the averment is, that it was only to be used in case the property could not ■ be sold. The complaint, as it now stands, states the purchase of plaintiffs to have been made from Boyer exclusively, induced by his representations, and relying wholly upon them; and another amendment now asked is, that the complaint may be allowed to allege that Boyer was only the agent of Wicker, acting in a fraudulent combination with him, and that the plaintiffs regarded him as acting for, and as the agent of Wicker, though nominally for himself; and, finally, to be allowed to charge that the mortgage was made to delay, hinder and defraud the purchaser of said premises, by placing it on record after it was too late to ascertain, from an examination of the record, the existence of the mortgage.
Such is the aspect the case will present, if the proposed
I. The application comes entirely too late. It is more than two years since all the proofs were taken in the cause, and in the mean time, the principal witness Boyer, and who, it is very obvious, the defendant’s counsel, as the affidavit shows, would desire to subject to a further examination, is dead. After the proofs were taken, the plaintiffs counsel must have been fully apprised of the defect in their pleadings, but the cause is noticed for repeated hearings, and it is finally brought to argument, and when the defendant’s counsel urges the difficulty under which the case labors, the counsel for plaintiff insists that the complaint is abundantly sufficient to let in the proof; or, in other words, that the evidence sustains the complaint, and not only does not ask for any amendment, but repudiates the necessity of any. It is only sought when the result of the suit shows the fatal infirmity of the pleading. I know the Code is liberal in its provisions on the subject of amendments, and the courts have generally been liberal in applying them; but I am not aware of any case where amendments, of the sweeping and radical character of those asked for in this case, have been allowed after the hearing and decision of a cause, and after judgment has substantially been given.
II. The plaintiff is not entitled to relief under the 169th and 170th sections of the Code. These sections provide that no variance between the allegations of a pleading, and the proof, shall be material, unless it has actually misled the adverse ¡párty to his prejudice in maintaining his action or defence upon
III. The 173d section of the Code extends the power of the court, to order an amendment, even after judgment, by conforming the pleadings to the facts proved, but this is subject to two important qualifications: 1st. It must b e in furtherance of justice ; and 2d. It can only be allowed when the amendment does not change substantially the claim or defence. We have seen that the amendments here proposed, would substantially and radically change the whole scope and character of the claim, making it, to all intents and purposes, a new and independent action, requiring a new line of defence, and demanding a widely extended examination of witnesses.
In deciding' the cause, I expressed great doubts upon the merits, and declared in substance, that it would be very unsafe, were the case otherwise free from difficulty, to determine the rights of the parties upon the unsupported testimony of a witness who, by his own confession, was the most active and guilty party to the alleged fraud, and who presented himself with neither external nor intrinsic claims to credibility. Were the amendments to be allowed, and the case again before me, freed from the difficulties which the pleadings present, I should have great hesitation in coming to a decision favorable to the plaintiff. The advancement of justice, therefore, does not by any means imperatively call for the interposition of that power of the court which, it is admitted, is wholly discretionary.
The motion must be denied, with $10 costs.