32 Minn. 92 | Minn. | 1884
The second defence set up in the answer is a former adjudication. The reply sets out in full the pleadings, issues, evidence, and proceedings in the former action. The declaration in that case was in the ordinary form in a common-law action of trover. The material allegations were that on the 13th of May, 1859, the plaintiff was possessed, as of his own property, of 45 Minnesota state railroad bonds; that on the same day they came into the possession of ■defendant, who, although well knowing that they belonged to plaintiff, refused to deliver them to him upon request, but converted them
An inspection and comparison of these two pleadings clearly shows that there is an identity of parties, subject-matter, and cause of action in the two actions. The fact of the exchange of the old bonds for the new and the cash in nowise affects the matter, for plaintiff rests his claim to the latter wholly upon his right to the former. So-far as concerns the question under consideration, the ease stands precisely as if the action had been brought to recover the old bonds. The property, then, is the same, and every material allegation of the two pleadings the same, and the evidence necessary to recover would be identical in both cases. As suggested by counsel for respondents,
The plaintiff, however, suggests that, in a common-law action of trover, nothing but the right of possession is determined; but that, in a civil action under the Code, the court may grant the party any relief to which he may show himself entitled: and he then resorts to the reply to show that plaintiff has some equitable interest in these bonds; that defendant held them only as security for damages for the breach of a certain contract between him and the M. & P. E. Co., and that plaintiff is entitled to an accounting to ascertain the extent of defendant’s interest, and that while this could not be done in the common-law action of trover, it can be done in an action like the present under the Code. In brief, that, under the Code, a complaint to recover specific personal property, setting up absolute ownership and right of possession, may, in connection with the reply, be turned into a bill of accounting. But it is elementary that a reply cannot take the place of a complaint, so as to change the character of the action, or enlarge the rights and remedies of the plaintiff. It will not avail that the reply may disclose certain rights in plaintiff which might have been made the grounds of complaint. These rights must be set up in the complaint, so that the defendant can,by answer, traverse them. There are no facts stated in the complaint showing that plaintiff is entitled to any such relief, and there is nowhere in the record any suggestion
Judgment affirmed.
Dickinson, J., because of illness, took no part in this decision.