62 Fla. 196 | Fla. | 1911
— George K. Watt brought an action against the corporation on its contract under seal. The corporation pleaded as a bar to the action a concurrent parol contract and also a want of consideration for the contract under seal sued on. No demurrer to these pleas was interposed, but by a paper filed in the cause the plaintiff “takes and joins issue” on the pleas. Judg
The only contention here is that the canse was erroneously tried when it “was not at issue, no replication having been filed to the pleas of defendant setting up new matter” as a defense to the action.
Under the decisions of this court it is error to allow a cause to go to trial in the absence of any reply to, or joinder of issue on, a plea which requires something more Than a mere similiter to put it in issue. Muller v. Ocala Foundry & Machine Works, 49 Fla. 189, 38 South. Rep. 64; Asia v. Hiser, 22 Fla. 378; Livingston v. L’Engle, 22 Fla. 427; Livingston v. Anderson, 30 Fla. 117, 11 South. Rep. 270. In the cited cases there was no response to or issue taken on pleas that required something more than a mere similiter.
Section 1447, General Statutes of 1906, Section 1055, Revised Statutes, provides that “Either party may plead in answer to the plea or subsequent pleading of his adversary, that he joins issue thereon, which joinder of issue may be as follows, or to the like effect: ‘the plaintiff joins issue upon the defendant’s-plea.’-such form of joinder of issue shall be deemed to be a denial of the substance of the plea,-and an issue thereon, and in all eases where plaintiff’s pleading is in denial of the pleading of the defendant, or some part of it, the plaintiff may add a joinder of issue for the defendant.”
In this case there was a taking or joinder of issue on the pleas tendering issues even though such plea's may have been insuíficiént in law as a defense to the action. Under the statute the joinder of issue filed operated as a denial of thé averments of the pleas, and'the plaintiff could have formally added, for the defendant, a simimiter
After a full trial of an action at law upon the merits, the mere absence of a similiter to a plea or replication is not ground for a reversal of Hie judgment, the similiter not having been insisted on by the opposing party or required by the court. Huling v. Florida Savings Bank, 19 Fla. 695; Wilson v. Hunter, 25 Fla. 169, 6 South. Rep. 132; Florida Ry. Nav. Co. v. Webster, 25 Fla. 391, 5 South. Rep. 711; Barrs v. Brace, 38 Fla. 265, 20 South. Rep. 991; Frank v. Williams, 36 Fla. 136, 18 South. Rep. 351; St. Johns H. R. Co. v. Shalley, 33 Fla. 397, 14 South. Rep. 890.
As there was a joinder of issue on the pleas, and the filing of a similiter is a mere form that is immaterial after judgment on the merits the error asserted does not appear and the judgment is affirmed.