67 Mo. 622 | Mo. | 1878
— This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court, in sustaining a motion to strike from the files of said court an amended petition of plaintiff, and in refusing to allow the same to be filed after said motion was sustained. It appears that this cause-was once before in this court, and is reported in 60 Mo. 512. The judgment was reversed and cause remanded because of the admission of illegal evidence, and in the opinion a suggestion was made that the petition stated one cause of action and the evidence tended to establish another.
It appears from the record now before us that, when the mandate of this court was filed in the trial court, the plaintiff, at the September term, 1874, had leave granted him to file an amended petition thirty days before the ensuing January term. This order was made on the 29th of October, and the amended petition was filed in vacation, on the 22nd day of December, 1874. At the January term, 1875, defendant filed his motion to strike out said amended petition, alleging as grounds therefor, among others, that the same had not been filed in pursuance of any order of the court, and that more than three petitions, filed by plaintiff, had been adjudged to be insufficient, in whole or in part, upon demurrer or motion. This motion was sustained and the petition stricken out, whereupon plaintiff again asked leave to file the same, which the court refused.
To a great extent the allowance of- amendments of pleadings in a cause is discretionary with the trial court, and with the exercise of this.discretion we do not ordinarily interfere. To justify such interference it must appear that it has been arbitrarily and unjustly exercised, and it is the duty of the party complaining to make this manifest. In the absence of anything in the record showing
Aeeirmed,