47 Kan. 372 | Kan. | 1891
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought by Mary H. Simpson and R. J. Simpson, wife and husband, against W. H. Hurd, to recover the sum of $5,650, claimed to be due to them as the purchase-price of certain real estate sold and conveyed by them to the defendant. The petition stated and showed a joint cause of action in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendant for the purchase-price of the land. It appeared on the trial, however, that although the sale and conveyance was by a single deed executed by both the plaintiffs jointly, for a jóint consideration of $5,650, yet that each of the plaintiffs owned a separate portion of the real estate con - veyed, and it is therefore now claimed that each had a separate cause of action, and that the two together did not have a joint cause of action, and therefore could not maintain this action for the purchase-price, nor for any portion thereof. This
Of course this court did not intend to hold in our former decision, and would not hold if the question were properly raised, that where each of two persons has a separate cause of action, such two persons together might maintain a joint action to enforce their separate causes of action. (Hudson v. Comm’rs of Atchison Co., 12 Kas. 140; Swenson v. Plow Co., 14 id. 387; Palmer v. Waddell, 26 id. 352; Dobbs v. Stauffer, 24 id. 127, 128; Jeffers v. Forbes, 28 id. 174; McGrath v. City of Newton, 29 id. 365; City of Ellsworth v. Rossiter, 45 id. 237.)
“Sec. 37. Of the parties to the action, those who are united in interest must be joined, as plaintiffs or defendants; but if the consent of one who should have been joined as plaintiff cannot be obtained, he may be made a defendant, the reason being stated in the petition.”
And under § 83, article 7, of the civil code, “the plaintiffs may unite several causes of action in the same petition; ” but, in order that they may do so, these “causes of action” must all belong to one of the several classes of actions mentioned in said section, “and must affect all the parties to the action, except in actions to enforce mortgages or other liens.” Now, where each of two plaintiffs has a separate cause of action, the separate cause of action of one of the plaintiffs would certainly not in any manner affect the other plaintiff; hence, under said § 83 of the civil code, such two separate “causes of action” could not be united in one and the same action. But if they should be so united, then there would be an improper joinder' of causes of action. (Jeffers v. Forbes, 28 Kas. 174.) And the question whether they could be so united or not might properly be raised by a demurrer to the petition, where the facts showing the same appear upon the face of the petition. (Civil Code, § 89, subdiv. 5; Jeffers v. Forbes, 28 Kas. 177; Barnes v. City of Beloit, 19 Wis. 93; Newcomb v. Horton, 18 id. 566. Also, in the same connection, see Fuller v. Fuller, 5 Hun, 595; Fisher v. Hall, 41 N. Y. 416.) In the opinion of the court in case of Jeffers v. Forbes, supra, delivered by Mr. Justice Brewer, the following, among other language, is used:
“ The first ground of demurrer, as heretofore stated, is, that several causes of action were improperly joined; and the con*375 tention is, that the setting aside of each of the six several deeds from the plaintiffs to the defendant, W. H. Forbes, was a separate and independent cause of action, in which only the grantor in such deed had any interest. . . . We think the contention of the defendants in error is correct, and that the ruling of the district court must be sustained on this ground. [ Such ruling of the district court was, that the demurrer should be sustained.] ... As each grantor is alone interested in obtaining the cancellation of his own deed, and as all the other plaintiffs would be improper parties in an action brought by the one alone to set aside his individual deed, so where all the parties unite in an action to have set aside six several deeds by separate grantors conveying separate interests, they unite six several causes of action in one suit, and six several causes of action in each of which only a portion of the plaintiffs is interested. . . . We conclude, then, that upon this ground the ruling of the district court is correct, and must be affirmed. We might stop here, but inasmuch as under § 92 of the civil code the court, upon the application of the plaintiffs, must allow them to file separate petitions for the different causes of action, it is due to the parties that we should examine further, and determine whether the second ground of demurrer, namely, that the petition does not state facts enough to constitute a cause of action, is sustainable.”
In the ease of Barnes v. City of Beloit, supra, the supreme court of Wisconsin, in holding that a demurrer to the complaint upon the ground that several causes of action were improperly joined would lie, used the following, among other language:
“But the complaint in the action sets forth separate causes of action, one in favor of each plaintiff, without being separately stated; and if so, several causes of action are improperly united. The counsel for the respondents, however, maintains that different causes of action, within the meaning of §5, eh. 125, R. S., are improperly united only where there are in the same complaint causes of action of the different classes mentioned in § 29 of the same chapter; as, for instance, where the complaint contains one count in tort and another on contract; and that where there are several causes of action, to wit, one in favor of each of several plaintiffs, in the same complaint, and all of the same class, the remedy is not by demurrer, but by motion. He cites several cases to this point, but they are all cases where*376 several causes of action in favor of all the plaintiffs, affecting all the parties, and which might be united in the same complaint, were not separately stated. But in this case each separate cause of action does not affect all the parties to the action, and they could not be united without violating the provisions of § 29, aforesaid. In other words, the plaintiffs have no common pecuniary interest. The complaint would have been held bad before the code for multifariousness.”
In the case of Fuller v. Fuller, supra, the following was decided :
“Where, upon the trial of an action brought by two plaintiffs to recover for the conversion of a team of oxen, it appeared that each of the plaintiffs owned one of the oxen, held, that a motion for a nonsuit of both of the plaintiffs, on the ground that they had brought a joint action and shown a several interest, was properly denied.” (Syllabus.)
In the case just cited, the case of Simar v. Canaday, 53 N. Y. 298, is referred to, which decides as follows:
“A misjoinder of parties plaintiff is not a ground for dismissal of the complaint as to all the plaintiffs, if either has shown that he has a good cause of action. In such case the motion must be for dismissal of the complaint of the plaintiff in whom no right of action appears.” (Syllabus.)
In the case of Fisher v. Hall, supra, the plaintiffs were the children and their husbands and the grandchildren of George Fisher. Their action was for the recovery of certain undivided interests in real property, and they brought their action as devisees under the last will and testament of Leonard Fisher, the father of George, by which will Leonard devised to George the property in question, with other property, in trust for the use of George’s children and their heirs. The plaintiffs were only a portion of the tenants in common of the real estate in controversy, and not all of such tenants in common, and the case was decided upon the theory that such an action could be rightfully maintained only by each tenant in common separately, or by all the tenants in common jointly, and not by simply a portion of the tenants in common. A judgment, however, in favor of the plaintiffs, who were only a portion
“As tenants in common, representing less than the aggregate common interests in the estate, the plaintiffs probably would have been unable to have maintained a joint action, if that objection had been taken in time. . . . But as the facts of the case were fully stated in the complaint, showing that the plaintiffs did not represent all the common interests in the estate, if any objection was intended to be taken to their right to maintain the action on the account, it should have been presented at that time. By answering and taking issue on the case alleged, this objection was waived, and it became the duty of the court to try and determine the issue as it had been joined by the pleadings. If any objection existed to the form in which the action was brought, it was that the complaint contained several causes of action which had been improperly united, and that should have been raised by demurrer. As it was not, it toas waived, within the express language of section lj.8 of the code. The judgment should be affirmed with costs.”
The above § 148 of the New York code, together with § 147 of that code, corresponds precisely with § 91 of the Kansas code, hereafter quoted.
We know of no decision by any court of last resort adverse to any of the foregoing eases. There is a dictum, however, in the case of Masters v. Freeman, 17 Ohio St. 323, which comes near it. The ease of Bort v. Yaw, 46 Iowa, 323, which is supposed to be strongly against the above views, has no application whatever to this case, for the reason that under the statutes of Iowa a demurrer will not lie on the ground of a misjoinder or improper joinder of causes of action; nor can a defendant ever waive anything under the statutes in that state by merely failing to file such a demurrer and failing to raise the question specifically by answer. The contention on the part of the defendant below would seem to be substantially, that where two or more persons commence an action jointly, they must allege and prove a joirft cause of action in favor of all the plaintiffs* or all must utterly fail in their action; or, in other words, their contention is as follows: Where two or more persons
“The common-law theory of the judgment was in every respect different from this. Based upon the intensely arbitrary notion of joint rights and obligations, it regarded the demand of co-plaintiffs on the one side, and the liability of co-defendants on the other, except in a certain well-defined class of cases, as a unit, as utterly incapable of being severed, as something which must be established as to all or must fail as to all the parties. In no instance was affirmative relief granted to the defendant. Recoveries by plaintiff against plaintiff, or by defendant against defendant, were unknown. Since the right of the plaintiffs or the liability of the defendants was conceived of as one and indivisible, the recovery must be against all the defendants equally, and in favor of all the plaintiffs alike. As a general rule, therefore, independent of statute and of the few excepted cases, the judgment in a common-law action could not be severed, and be pronounced in favor of some plaintiffs and against the others, nor in favor of some defendants and against the others. No principle of the common-law procedure was more firmly established than this; and it represented all the technical and arbitrary notions which characterize the entire system. The codes are unanimous in their dealing with this subject. In the most direct and comprehensive language they reject these narrow dogmas*379 of the law, and establish the liberal doctrines of equity, which they apply to the civil action without exception or limitation. The statutory provisions are so clear, definite and certain that no reasonable doubt as to their scope and meaning is possible. Although the purpose of the law-makers and the theory of their legislation are so plainly expressed, the courts have hesitated and halted in giving effect to this extent and in carrying out this design. The change made in the ancient order of things is so radical and sweeping that judges sometimes shrink from its contemplation, and seem to regard the statute as though it could not mean what its language declares. This evasion or ignoring of the legislative will has by no means been universal. In many states the courts have conformed to the letter and the spirit of the codes, and have by their decisions established the true principles which can and must be adopted and used in constructing and arranging the practical rules of procedure that regulate the recovery of judgments by means of the civil action.”
There are cases in some of the states where they have no code like ours, or where the code is ignored and the common-law rules followed, in which it is held that the several plaintiffs in an action must all recover jointly or all utterly fail; and following this doctrine it is further held, that it makes no difference how many causes of action may be stated in the plaintiffs’ original pleading in favor of one or more of the plaintiffs; still if no joint cause of action is stated in favor of all the plaintiffs, the pleading may be demurred to upon the ground that no cause of action at all is stated in the pleading. Such can hardly be the law, however, in any state like this, where all the distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity and all the forms of all such actions and suits are abolished, and where we have in their place only one form of action, which is called a civil action, (Civil Code, § 10,) and where “judgment may be given for or against one or more of several plaintiffs, and for or against one or more of several defendants.” (Civil Code, § 396.) It would seem strange that a petition may contain several causes of action and yet not contain one. The petition, however, in the present case contains only one cause of action, and that is a joint
“Sec. 91. When any of the defects enumerated in section 89 do not appear upon the face of the petition, the objection may be taken by answer; and if no objection be taken, either by demurrer or answer, the defendants shall be deemed to have waived the same, except only the objection to the jurisdiction of the court, and that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”
Where a separate cause of action in favor of each of the several plaintiffs is stated in the petition, so as to subject the petition to a demurrer upon the ground that several causes of action are improperly joined, and where a demurrer upon such ground is interposed and sustained, then the proper practice is as follows: Each of the plaintiffs will be permitted, upon application, to file a separate petition for his or her own cause of action, and each of such plaintiffs will then be permitted to separately proceed upon his or her own separate petition. (Civil Code, § 92; Jeffers v. Forbes, 28 Kas. 180.) In all probability, however, each of the plaintiffs in the present case had an interest in the entire amount of the purchase-price of their land, and if the question of their interests, whether joint or several,
Upon the facts of this case, and with our views of the law, it is the opinion of this court that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed, and that the motion for the rehearing should be overruled, and it is so ordered.