This is an appeal from an order denying a motion for change of place of trial.
Action Commenced. On March 5, 1956, the plaintiff, Lorenzo W. Johnson, commenced this action by filing in the district court of the eighth judicial district of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Cascade, a complaint against the defendants at which time summons in the action, directed to each of the defendants, duly issued out of said district court. Thereafter such summons together with a copy of the complaint were served upon the defendants in Lincoln County, Montana, wherein they all then did and now do reside.
Complaint. The complaint so filed and served alleges: That at the times mentioned in the complaint the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession of the southeast quarter *456 (SE14), and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter (SW^NE1/^) of Section twenty-two (22), Township thirty-four (34) north, Range twenty-six (26) west, Montana Principal Meridian, as recorded in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Lincoln County, Montana, on which at the time of plaintiff’s acquisition there was standing a large quantity of merchantable saw timber which plaintiff desired to log, process to lumber and sell to the general public; that at such times the defendant, Tobacco River Lumber Company, was and now is a copartnership composed of the defendants, Columbus Clark of Eureka, Montana, Rodney D. Witt and William C. Clark; that on October 8, 1952, such copartnership filed its certificate of partnership in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Lincoln County, Montana, being file No. 2180 therein; that between November 1, 1953, and June 1, 1954, such copartnership through its members, agents, servants and employees and knowing the property to belong to plaintiff, did wilfully and without lawful authority cut down, saw, log and carry off wood, under-wood, trees and timber situate on the described lands and transport same to defendants’ saw mill where such wood and timber were processed in lumber having a market value of approximately $90 per thousand board feet; that plaintiff had no knowledge of defendants’ said acts during the cutting and transporting of the wood and timber, but that many months after-wards plaintiff was advised by one of the copartners that the copartnership had taken plaintiff’s said property and converted same to defendants’ own use; that about February 13, 1956, plaintiff in writing gave notice to the defendant partners that there was due and owing to plaintiff the sum of $180,000 payable to the order of plaintiff’s attorney at the latter’s office in Great Falls, Montana, which sum plaintiff demanded for and as ‘ ‘ constituting payment in full for that certain two million board feet of wood, underwood, trees and timber converted by” defendants, their servants, agents or employees the exact dates and times being known to the defendants; that defendants failed and refused to pay plaintiff the reasonable value of the wood and *457 timber so reduced to marketable lumber and converted to defendants’ use by reason whereof the defendants are indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $180,000 and that, as the taking of the property was wilful and without lawful authority, plaintiff demands the further sum of $360,000 and prays judgment against defendants in the total sum of $540,000 and costs of suit.
Appearance-Change of Venue Demanded. On March 23, 1956, the defendants, by and through their present counsel, first came into court in the instant action by serving upon plaintiff’s counsel and filing in such court and cause a motion to strike certain designated portions of plaintiff’s complaint. Thereby defendants made their general appearance in the case (R.C.M. 1947, section 93-3103, subd. 4, and section 93-8505) at which time defendants’ counsel also served upon plaintiff’s counsel and filed in said court and cause the following instruments in writing, viz.: (a) An affidavit of merits executed and sworn to by the defendant, Rodney D. Witt; (b) a demand that the trial of the case be had in Lincoln County, Montana, it being the proper county for the trial of the action, and (c) a motion for change of the place of trial from the district court for Cascade County to the district court for Lincoln County, Montana.
Affidavit of Merits. In his affidavit of merits the defendant, Rodney D. Witt, deposed: That he is one of the defendants named in plaintiff’s complaint; that as such he is acquainted with the facts stated in his affidavit of merits; that he has read the plaintiff’s complaint, knows its contents and is acquainted with the facts and matters therein stated which constitute plaintiff’s alleged cause of action against the defendants; that the principal place of business and the residence of the defendants,, as individuals and as copartners, at all times since October 8, 1952, has been and now is Lincoln County, Montana; that service of summons was made upon the defendants within the County of Lincoln, Montana, wherein affiant resides and has resided at all times since on and before the date of the filing of plaintiff’s said complaint; thai the cause of action set forth *458 in such, complaint is based upon an alleged conversion by defendants of wood, underwood, trees and timber situate upon property located in Lincoln County, Montana, and that said conversion took place, if at all, in Lincoln County, Montana, and not in Cascade County, that affiant, as one of the defendants, has knowledge of all the facts in the case, and verily believes and therefore states that the defendants have a good and substantial defense upon the merits to the cause of action set forth in plaintiff’s complaint and that the motion and demand for change of place of trial are made in good faith in order that the action may be transferred to the proper county and not for the purpose of delay.
Motion for Change of Yenue. Defendants’ motion for change of place of trial to Lincoln County was made upon the grounds: (1) That at all times mentioned in the complaint the defendants were and are all residents of Lincoln County, Montana, and co-partners having their principal place of business at all times since the organization of such copartnership, in Lincoln County, Montana; (2) that service of summons in the action was made upon the defendants in Lincoln County, Montana; (3) that, as appears from the affidavit of the defendant, Rodney D. Witt, filed on behalf of the defendants, the cause of action in plaintiff’s complaint herein is based upon an alleged conversion by defendants of wood, underwood, trees and timber situate and .growing upon land owned by plaintiff and situate in Lincoln ■County, Montana; and (4) it appears both from plaitiff’s complaint and from the affidavit of the defendant, Rodney D. Witt, filed in the cause that the alleged conversion took place in Lincoln County, Montana.
No counter-affidavit was filed and the statements set forth in defendant Witt’s affidavit of merits stand undisputed in 'the record now before us. In addition to the facts recited in the .aforesaid affidavit, it must be remembered that in his duly verified complaint of March 5, 1956, the plaintiff shows that -the lands therein described from which the wood, underwood, -.trees and timber are alleged to have been cut and carried off *459 are situate and title thereto is recorded in Lincoln County, Montana; that the defendant, Columbus Clark, is of Eureka, Montana; and that the certificate of partnership of the defendant copartnership was and is filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Lincoln County, Montana. Of course the court will and it does take judicial notice of the fact that Eureka, where the defendant, Columbus Clark, resides, is a town situate in Lincoln County, Montana.
The complaint by which plaintiff commenced this suit alleges plaintiff’s ownership and right of possession of the chattels, their conversion by the defendants and resulting damage. These are the essential elements of an action for conversion. Klind v. Valley County Bank,
R.C.M. 1947, section 93-2905, provides: “If the county in which the action is commenced is not the proper county for the trial thereof, the action may, notwithstanding, be tried therein, unless the defendant, at the time he makes his general appearance in the case, by answer, demurrer or otherwise, files an affidavit of merits, and demands, in writing, that the trial he had in the proper county.” Emphasis supplied.
Appearance is the first act of the defendant in court. Ballen tine’s Law Dictionary (1948 ed.), page 91; 2 Bancroft’s Code Practice and Remedies, section 790, page 1164; 3 Am. Jur., Appearance, section 2, note 7, page 783. An appearance may be general or special.
“A general appearance in an action is made when a party comes into court without limiting the object for which he comes in.” Stoffels v. Cherry,
Under E.C.M. 1947, section 93-2905, when a timely and proper motion for change of place of trial is pending, the court has no jurisdiction except first to rule on the motion for change of place of trial. Lloyd v. National Boston-Montana M. Corp.,
E.C.M. 1947, section 93-2906, provides: “The court or judge must, on motion, change the place of trial. * * *
“1. When the county designated in the complaint is not the proper county.” Emphasis supplied.
The above-quoted provisions of section 93-2906 are mandatory and, on timely and proper application, require the district court to change the venue. State ex rel. Gnose v. District Court,
Under the facts shown by the record in the instant ease the rule applicable is as stated in State ex rel. Bonners Ferry Lumber Co., Ltd. v. District Court,
The right of the defendants to a .change of the place of trial herein must be determined by the state of the pleadings, and the condition of things on March 23, 1956, at the time the ■defendants made their general appearance in the case.
In Wallace v. Owsley,
In Sims v. Mains,
On March 27, 1956, being four days after defendants made their general appearance in the action and served and filed their demand and motion for change of place of trial, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint in the cause whereby an attempt is made to change the action sued upon from one sounding in tort to one founded upon an implied contract and to adversely affect defendants’ demand and right to a change of the place of trial.
The district court took its time in hearing and deciding defendants’ motion for change of place of trial. The hearing *462 thereon was not held until April 5, 1956, and thereafter the court delayed until May 9, 1956, the making and entering of its ruling and order denying defendants’ motion and demand.
Defendants had but twenty days after the service upon them on March 27th of the amended complaint within which to plead thereto and on April 16th, being the last day of the allotted period, defendants served and filed a motion to strike designated portions of such amended pleading. Had defendants not pleaded to the amended complaint within the time prescribed therefor their default would have been taken and entered.
It is well-settled, however, that in the determination of defendants’ right to a change of place of trial the amended complaint and defendants’ motion to strike portions thereof have no bearing whatever. Under the statutes the district court must determine defendants’ right to a change of place of trial to the proper county upon the state of plaintiff’s original complaint as it stood on March 23, 1957, at the time defendants first came into court and made their general appearance in the case. K..C.M. 1947, sections 93-2905, and 93-2906.
In Buell v. Dodge,
Remington Sewing Machine Co. v. Cole,
Ah Fong v. Sternes,
“Even if the complaint be regarded as stating two separate causes of action, upon one of which the defendant would be entitled to a change of venue, but not upon the other, the result would be the same. It is the plaintiff’s own doing if the complaint be so drawn.
He cannot deprive the defendant of his right to a change of venue by the addition of something to the complaint.
If this were not the rule, it would be very easy for a plaintiff to defeat the defendant’s right in the matter. All that plaintiff would have to do would be to add another cause of action to his complaint. It need not be a genuine cause of action, and it would not matter whether the two causes of action were properly united or not. For the defendant could not compel their separation by demurrer before moving for a change of venue, because he is required to take his proceedings for such change at the time of answering or demurring. Code Civil Proc. section 390. And the ‘right is to be determined by the condition of things existing at the time the parties claiming it first appeared in the action’. [Citing cases]. And even if this were not so, and the court had the power to postpone the hearing of the motion until after the hearing of the demurrer, it would deprive the defendant of his right to have the demurrer heard in the county of his residence. Heald v. Hendy,
“In any view that can be taken, therefore, the order refusing a change of venue was erroneous.” Emphasis supplied.
In Donohoe v. Wooster,
Heald v. Hendy,
In Brady v. Times-Mirror Co.,
In McClung v. Watt,
In Warren v. Ritter, 61 Cal. App. (2d) 403,
In Taaffee v. Bloch,
In Big Springs Land & Livestock Co. v. Beck,
The plaintiff Johnson concedes that at the time defendants made their general appearance in the case on March 23, 1956, they also made timely and proper demand, motion and proof that the trial be had in the proper county as is provided for in R.C.M. 1947, section 93-2905, but plaintiff contends that when he thereafter on March 27, 1956, served and filed an amended complaint on defendants that they were then required to make a second general appearance in the case and a second motion and a second demand for change of place of trial supported by a second affidavit of merits and that failing to do so the defendants “have waived their right to a change of venue since no timely motion for change of venue was made and this entire appeal then presents only a moot question.” Such contentions are wholly lacking in merit.
The “general appearance” referred to in R.C.M. 1947, section 93-2905, is the general appearance made by the defendant when he first comes into court and appears in the case in anywise or manner except specially and for the specific purpose of challenging the jurisdiction of the court over his person. When on April 16, 1957, the defendants served and filed their motion to strike certain portions of the amended complaint they were interposing a pleading allowed on the part of the defendants by the last subdivision 4 of section 93-3103, R.C.M. 1947, but they were not making their “general appearance in the case” for such appearance defendants had already made on March 23, 1956.
The right of the plaintiff to file an amended complaint has nothing whatever to do with the right of the defendants to a *467 change of place of trial to Lincoln County for which relief defendants had made timely and proper application prior to the filing of the amended complaint. The filling of the amended complaint had no effect whatever on defendants’ pending motion and demand for change of the place of trial.
The original complaint states an action in tort to recover damages for the conversion in Lincoln County of property there situate and by persons then and now there residing. The amended complaint states an action to recover a sum of money alleged to be due and owing from persons then and now residing in Lincoln County on an implied contract which wholly fails to show or indicate any place of performance. Such latter action upon proper demand therefor should be tried in Lincoln County wherein the defendants resided at the commencement of the action and wherein they were served with process herein. See Hardenburgh v. Hardenburgh,
It follows that the order of the district court denying defendants’ motion for a change of place of trial must be, and it is, reversed and the district court for Cascade Comity and the district judge presiding in the department thereof, wherein this cause was commenced and remains pending, are hereby directed to grant defendants’ motion and demand, and to cause the action and the files therein to be transferred to the district court of the eleventh judicial district of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Lincoln, and it is so ordered.
