22 Haw. 671 | Haw. | 1915
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Honolulu sustaining the plea in bar of the defendant to the plaintiff’s complaint. On January 4, 1915, the plaintiff filed an action against the defendant in the district court claiming damages for injury sustained by a horse of the plaintiff by reason of the defective condition of a certain pier at Honolulu upon which the horse had been driven at the direction of an employee of the defendant. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained. The plaintiff amended its complaint and a demurrer to the amended complaint was sustained and the case was dismissed. On February 16, 1915, the plaintiff commenced a new action in the same court by filing a complaint which was substantially like the amended complaint in the first action except that it contained the additional allegation that the defective condition of the pier “was such that the defect was known or should
The rule applicable here is that where a demurrer has been sustained because of the omission of the plaintiff to set forth in his complaint an allegation material to the cause of action attempted to be stated the judgment will not be a bar to a fresh action the complaint in which includes the allegation previously omitted. Gould v. Evansville etc. R. Co., 91 U. S. 526, 534; Cromwell v. Sac, 94 U. S. 351, 364. See Archer v. Naka, 19 Haw. 547.
An allegation that a party had knowledge of a certain matter or thing is an allegation of an ultimate and traversable fact, and not of a conclusion of law. 31 Cyc. 58; Voiles v. Beard, 58 Ind. 510; State v. Sooy, 39 N. J. L. 135, 149; Neilson v. Edwards, 148 N. W. (S. D.) 844, 847. “In pleadings it is necessary to allege only ultimate, as distinguished from evidential, facts.” Brown v. Cornwell, 20 Haw. 457, 465. We find, then, that the complaint in the second ease does contain an allegation of a fact necessary and material to the plaintiff’s claim
The appeal is sustained and the case is remanded to the district magistrate with the direction to overrule the plea in bar.