14 Wash. 647 | Wash. | 1896
By this appeal appellants seek a reversal of a judgment rendered against them as sureties in a bond given by the defendant in a suit pending in the superior court of Chehalis county, for the purpose, as it is alleged, of obtaining possession of the property owned by himself and the plaintiff in the action, as partners. Said bond was conditioned for the payment to the plaintiff, or to such other person as the court might order or its judgment direct, of the value of all of the assets of the partnership which came into his hands, and there was a proviso attached thereto that it was executed upon the express condition that it should not become effective unless the superior court gave to the defendant in the pending action, the'principal in the bond, the possession of the partnership property then in the hands of the receiver.
From the allegations of the complaint it was made to appear that final decree had been rendered in the action between the plaintiff and the defendant, who was the principal in the bond, and that such defendant had been adjudged liable to the plaintiff for a large sum of money; that he had failed to satisfy the decree entered in that action, or to account for the partnership property which had come into his possession; by reason of which it was claimed that the conditions of .the bond were broken so that the plaintiff could maintain an action thereon against the principal and his sureties. The principal named in the bond made default, but the sureties appeared and filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was overruled. Thereupon they answered, admitting certain allegations of the complaint and denying others, and set up certain facts by way of affirmative defense. Plaintiff moved to
The courts without the aid of any statute have long exercised the right to strike sham and frivolous answers, and this right is expressly given by our statute; but whether under such practice or the provisions of statutes like ours the right exists to strike denials is open to grave question. If it be held that the courts have the right to strike, as sham and frivolous, denials in the answer of material allegations of the complaint, the result will be that they must often be called upon to decide whether such denials are warranted by the facts, preliminary to the trial of the cause by the court or jury, and this question of fact will generally have to be determined upon proof pro and con by way of affidavits and not by examination of witnesses before the court. The result of this inquiry, if it have any result at all, will be for the court to determine upon this unsatisfactory proof the truth or falsity of the denials, which is the very question which must be determined by the court or jury upon the trial of the cause; and since, under all of the authorities, the court will never strike such allegations unless upon the clearest proof of their falsity, it will follow that in very few instances will any good purpose be subserved by this preliminary inquiry as to the good faith of the denials in the answer. It would therefore seem to accord with the better practice to hold that a denial in an answer, if
In all of the cases it is conceded that, under the common law system of pleading the plea of the general issue could not be stricken as sham or frivolous, and it would seem that a general denial of an allegation under the code performs substantially the same function as the plea of the general issue under the common law system of pleading. It would be of no use to array the authorities pro and con upon this question as to whether or not the denials in an answer may be stricken as sham and frivolous. It is sufficient to say that by far the greater number have held that they cannot be stricken and that nearly all of the recent cases are to that effect. The respondent seems to principally rely upon a New York case, People v. McCumber, 18 N. Y. 315, reported in 72 Am. Dec. 515, and the cases therein cited; but the fact that two of the judges of the court dissented from the opinion of that case, and the further fact that in several more recent cases decided by the same court a contrary doctrine has been announced in opinions concurred in by the entire court, are sufficient to show that the contention of the respondent, that the right to strike such allegations from the answer is established by authority, stands upon a very slight foundation. The cases which might be cited, holding that denials cannot be stricken, are so numerous that an attempt to cite them would be out of place. In our opinion the court committed reversible error when it struck the denials contained in appellant’s answer as sham and frivolous.
It is claimed that the court committed error in several respects in the taxation of costs. The questions arising upon most of these claims will not arise upon a retrial, but one of them may. The court allowed plaintiff, as a part of his costs, $100 as attorney’s fee, for the prosecution of the action. This was beyond the power of the court. In an action at law the court can impose n.o costs by way of attorney’s fee excepting such as are expressly provided by statute.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause re