28 S.C. 181 | S.C. | 1888
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In the complaint filed in this action
“South Carolina, Spartanburg County. C. P. Sanders, being duly sworn, says: He is an attorney for the plaintiffs in the above entitled action; that the foregoing complaint is true of his own knowledge, except as to matters therein stated on information and belief, and as to those matters he believes it to be true. That the sources of his knowledge and information are the possession of a verified itemized statement of the account sued upon, the admissions and statements of the defendant, and the statements of E. E. Botnar, James Geddes, and others. That the reason this verification is not made by one of the plaintiffs is, that neither of them is in this county or State, in which deponent is a resident.”
This affidavit was sworn to before a notary public on the 19th of January, 1887, and the action was commenced before the debt became payable, under the provisions of the act of 1883. 18 Stat., 491.
The defendant served a copy of his answer, which was not verified, denying each and every allegation of the complaint, and the same was immediately returned upon the ground that the answer was not verified.
The case was docketed on calendar 3, and when called, the plaintiffs moved for judgment by default, and the motion was resisted upon two grounds: 1st. That such a complaint as this could not be verified by an attorney. 2nd. If it could, the verification was insufficient in form and substance. The Circuit Judge overruled both of these grounds, holding that the complaint was properly verified. After this ruling was made, the defen
The Code provides, in section 177, that when “any pleading is verified, every subsequent pleading, except a demurrer, must be verified also and in the next section (178) it declares how a pleading shall be verified: it “must be by the affidavit of the party, or, if there be several parties united in interest, and pleading together, by one at leas! of such parties acquainted with the facts, if such party be within the county where the attorney resides, and capable of making the affidavit. The affidavit may also be made by the agent or attorney, if the action or defence be founded upon a written instrument for the payment of money only, and such instrument be in the possession of the agent or attorney, or if all the material allegations of the pleading be within the personal knowledge of the agent or attorney.”
It seems to us that the true construction of this language manifestly is, that there are two cases in which an attorney may, in the absence of the party from the county, verify a complaint: 1st. Where the action is founded upon a written instrument for the payment of money only, and such instrument is in the possession of the attorney. 2nd. Where all the material allegations of the complaint are within the personal knowledge of the attorney. The test, therefore, in every case is whether it falls under either of these classes. Now, it is quite plain that the present case does not fall under either of these classes. The action is not founded upon a written instrument for the payment of money only, and there is no pretence that all the material alie
This view would render it unnecessary to consider the other questions raised by the appeal, but as they present questions of practice which it is desirable to have settled, we will proceed to consider them. If the action was' such as would have justified a verification of the complaint by the attorney, the next'inquiry is whether the verification adopted in this case, a copy of which is set out above, was insufficient in form and substance. On reading the complaint and verification it is impossible to tell what allegations are made on knowledge and what on information and belief, and yet it is quite certain, from the language used in the verification, that some of the allegations were made on knowledge and some on information and belief, for the language is, “that the foregoing complaint is true of his own knowledge, except as to matters therein stated on information and belief, and as to those matters he believes it to be true.”
Where the allegations of a pleading are based, some of them on knowledge and others on information and belief, they ought to be so stated as to enable the other party to understand which of the allegations are made on knowledge and which upon information and belief. Here, however, all the allegations of the complaint, if looked at alone, and without reference to the verification, would seem to be made on knowledge, whereas it is apparent from the terms of the verification that some of these allegations were not made on knowledge, but upon information and belief. It seems to us that when a plaintiff desires to make an allegation which is based upon his own knowledge, a simple statement of such fact is sufficient, but when he desires to allege a fact upon information and belief, then he should state that he is informed and believes that such fact is true. Then when the complaint is verified, in the form here adopted, there is no difficulty in ascertaining what allegations are sworn to upon knowledge and what upon information and belief. Unless the complaint and the verification is in such form as to indicate what allegations are made on knowledge and what upon information and belief, we do not
But we think this verification is not only objectionable in point of form, but also in substance. The code requires, in the section last cited, that “when the pleading is verified by any other person than the party, he shall set forth in the affidavit his knowledge, or the grounds of his belief on the subject, and the reasons why it is not made by the party.” Now, here the affidavit states “that the sources of his knowledge and information are the possession of a verified itemized statement of the account sued upon, the admissions and statements of the defendant, and the statements of E. E. Bomar, James Geddes, and others.” Assuming that, by this language, the intention of the affiant was to set forth “the grounds of his belief,” the inquiry is whether it is sufficient for that purpose. It is of the most general and indefinite character. It does not state what were the admissions or statements of the defendant, or what were the statements of the third persons named. It is not stated that the defendant admitted all or even any material allegation of the complaint, or made any specific statements from which such admission might be inferred, and what was the nature of the statements made by the third persons does not appear. There is no fa-ot stated in the verification from which the court could infer that there was any ground for the belief that all the material allegations of the complaint were true. It is not even stated that the defendant admitted the correctness of the account, and certainly the statement that the affiant had possession “of a verified itemized statement of the account sued upon,” amounted to nothing, as such account was not an instrument for the payment of money only. Nor is any fact stated furnishing a ground for belief that the allegation in the fourth paragraph of the complaint — “that the defendant has disposed of and secreted his property with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors” — was true, upon which allegation rested the right of the plaintiffs to bring this action, under the statute above referred to, before the debt became due and payable.
As to the third ground of appeal, we thinlc that, by the express terms of section 195, the Circuit Judge, if he had been correct in his previous rulings, would have had the right to impose such terms as in his discretion might seem just, as a condition of the leave to answer after the time for answering had expired.
The question raised by the 4th ground of appeal would properly come up on exceptions to the taxation of costs, and cannot be considered here.
The position taken by respondents’ counsel, that the defendant having elected to serve a verified answer, cannot now question the correctness of the rulings of the Circuit Judge above considered, is based upon a misconception of fact. The defendant did not serve a verified answer, but only applied for leave to do so, after having unsuccessfully made the questions which have hereinbefore been considered; but when the leave was coupled with a condition which he did not see fit to accept, he declined to serve a verified answer and elected to appeal, as he had a right to do, from the rulings of the judge. It seems to us, therefore, that the complaint not being properly verified, the defendant had a right to serve an unverified answer, and the case should have gone on the proper docket for trial.
The judgment of this court is, that the ruling of the Circuit Judge, that the complaint was duly verified, be reversed, and that the case be remanded to the Circuit Court for trial.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Some importance attaches to this case as it relates to a question of practice. As I understand, the opinion declares that an agent or attorney can verify a complaint or defence only in two cases: (1) When the action is founded on a written instrument in his possession ; and (2) When all the material allegations of the pleading are within his personal knowledge. If this be so, the absence of the party from the State is no ground to allow the verification by another;
The section is certainly not expressed with clearness, and we must, of course, put our own construction upon it. But its very obscurity makes me hesitate to concur in a construction which is admitted to be contrary not only to the commentaries on the code, but to a long line of decisions in the State from which the code comes to us. It is remarkable that there is in the section no express provision allowing a verification to be made by an agent or attorney, on the ground of the absence of the party from the county. But we can hardly suppose it was the intention to wholly omit that which it would seem is at least one of the cases in which such authority is needed. The view of the New York authorities is, that the whole section considered together does make provision for that case; that the express enactment for the case where the party is “within the county” naturally indicates other provision where the party is “not in the county;” which is contained in the general declaration that, “when the pleading is verified by any other person than the party, he shall set forth in the affidavit his knowledge or the grounds of his belief on the subject and the reasons why it is not made by the party.” It is considered that this declaration could not have reference to either of the cases before stated, viz., where the agent had personal knowledge or possession of a written instrument, &c., for these stand on their own grounds, and in neither was there necessity or appropriateness in requiring “the grounds of his belief upon the subject.” Smith v. Rosenthal, 11 How. Pr., 442, which holds that “in the cases provided for in the second clause of the section, the legislature have virtually declared that the ‘possession’ of the instrument is a sufficient ground of belief of the truth of the pleading, and that personal knowledge of its truth is sufficient knowledge; and that either such possession or such knowledge is a sufficient reason why the verification is not by the party.”
As this appears not only from the sense of the words used, but from authority, is it not manifest that the expression, “any
Considering the admitted obscurity of the section, it seems to me that it would be better to follow the interpretation which it has received by such high authority, and to give to the absence of the party some weight upon the question of the right of an agent or attorney to make a verification for him.
Judgment reversed.