59 N.W. 714 | N.D. | 1894
Action on a promissory note signed in defendants’ firm name, viz. “W. W. Beasley & Sons.” On the 7th day of August, 1893, a summons herein was issued, and delivered to the sheriff for service, and was served upon the defendant Washington W. Beasley. The regularity of the summons is not questioned, except as to the manner of describing the defendants in its title. The action is entitled, in the original summons, “Joseph Gans, Plaintiff, vs. W. W. Beasley & Sons, defendants.” On said 7th day of August, 1893, and affidavit and undertaking in attachment were filed in said action in the office of the clerk of the District Court. The affidavit was entitled as was the summons, and, omitting formal parts, is as follows: “Joseph Gans came before me personally, and, being first duly sworn, doth say that he is said plaintiff in the above entitled action, which is brought for the recovery of money, and a summons has been issued therein; that a cause of action exists against the defendants and in favor of said plaintiff therein, and the amount of said plaintiff’s claim therein is ten thousand dollars ($10,000,) with interest thereon since October 20th at ten per cent, per annum, and the ground thereof is as follows, that is to say: ‘Defendants’ promissory note to plaintiff, as follows, to-wit: $10,000. Billings, Montana, October 20th, 1892. First day of July, 1893, after date, for value received, we jointly and
At a term of the District Court held in September, 1893, a motion was made by the defendants to set aside the order of August 26th, allowing the original summons and complaint to be amended; also, to vacate the original summons and the attachment proceedings in the action. The motion was in wilting, and stated that “the said defendants, Washington W. Beasley, George M. Beasley, and Nat Beasley, by James G. Campbell, their attorney, appear specially for the pux-pose of making this motion.” The grounds of the motion are stated as follows: “That the said oi'iginal summons, so called, is, and was at all times, void on its face; that it was and is not a summons; that it was addi'essed to no pei'son, and no pei'son was therein or thei'eby requii'ed to answer to any complaint, and thei'e was no substance in it capable of being made good by amendment; that, at or before the
The errors assigned in this court are voluminous, but may be condensed as follows: First, The court erred in denying defendants’ motion to vacate the ex parte order of the District Court allowing the original summons and complaint to be amended. Second, The court erred in allowing a change of parties under an application to amend. Third, The court erred in allowing the title of the affidavit to be changed by adding new parties after a levy was made, and by allowing the body of the affidavit to be amended so as to make the same more specific as to the grounds of the action. Fourth, the court erred in not vacating the attachment on defendants’ motion made for that purpose.
The assignments of error, considered collectively, present for solution very important questions of practice, none of which have before been considered by this court. The remedy by attachment, under the system of practice authorized by the statutes of this state, is a dependant remedy. It cannot exist independent of an action. Section 4993, Comp. Laws, provides that in certain
It would seem, at first blush, that a plaintiff ought to be strictly required to sue in his own proper name; but it was held in New York in Bank v. Magee, 20 N. Y. 355, where “the prosecution of a suit by an individual banker in a name imputing a corporate character, under which he carried on business, is a merely formal error, amendable in the courts of original jurisdiction.” One Charles Cook was the real party in interest, but brought the action in the name of the bank of Havana, which was an incoi'porated bank owned by Cook. No explanation was made in the summons or complaint. Judge Denio, speaking for the court, said: “I am of the opinion that when it appeared in the trial that the plaintiff’s attorney has fallen into the mistake of stating the name which Mr. Cook has given to his bank, as the creditor of Markham, and as the plaintiff in the suit, instead of his proper name, a plain case was presented for an amendment, under § 173 of the Code. * * * The error was one which could be corrected before or after judgment, in furtherance of justice.” Judge Comstock in the same case says: “Mr. Cook has simply misnamed himself. He has taken the name which he used in this particular business, and, quite irregularly, has introduced himself to the court by that name. This he should have not done. He ought to have given the surname and the Christian name given him in baptism, but I consider this a mere irregularity in procedure.” See Barber v. Smith, 41 Mich. 138, 1 N. W. 992; Cady v. Smith, (Neb.) 12 N. W. 95. Manufacturing Co. v. Vroman,
In the case at bar, as has been shown, defendants attempted to appear specially, and for “the purposes of the motion only.” See grounds of motion, supra. Among other grounds enumerated in the motion is one stated as follows: “That the affidavit on which said writ is based is fatally defective, in this: that the grounds of the plaintiff’s claim are not therein stated.” It is apparent that this alleged ground for vacating the attachment has no connection with the other grounds which precede it in the motion. The preceding grounds relate to the defective title in the summons, affidavit, writ, and undertaking,
But our attention is directed by appellants’ counsel to still another feature of the order appealed from. The trial court directed, in effect, that the affidavit and warrant of attachment be so amended in their body as to state, in express terms, that the note set out in the affidavit was executed and delivered by the defendants to the plaintiff, and that no part thereof had been paid. Counsel contends, and supports this contention by numerous authorities, that an affidavit for an attachment cannot be lawfully amended in matter of substance, and, further, that the amendment authorized by the order was an amendment of that character. We cannot so construe the amendment. It is true that it authorizes the express averment of certain facts; but a careful reading of the original affidavit will show that all of such facts are averred, by necessary implication, in the original affidavit, and hence their averment, in terms, by order of the