94 Ga. 785 | Ga. | 1894
It is undoubtedly true that sound principles of pleading require that an action shall be brought by the person having the legal interest therein, and this action should have been brought by the assignee without Ellington as a party. If the defendant had demurred specially upon the ground that Ellington was not entitled to institute the action, the court should have dismissed it, unless the declaration was amended by striking therefrom the name of Ellington as plaintiff. One of the objects of a special demurrer to a declaration is to require the plaintiff to amend the declaration in matters of form, and if he refuses to amend, the court may dismiss the action. But a motion to dismiss an action for improper joinder of parties is a different thing from a special demurrer, which, as above indicated, is predicated
This amendment did not change the cause of action, as was insisted upon by counsel for the plaintiff in error. The cause of action was a breach of the contract; the amendment related to the manner of proof. In the original declaration the plaintiff alleged that he had complied with all the conditions of the policy; in the amendment he averred that he had not complied with certain of those conditions, because the defendant had waived compliance. This in our opinion meant that he abandoned that part of the original declaration which alleged compliance with the conditions referred to, and would not rely upon it, but would rely upon the waiver. Where a plaintiff, having averred in his original declaration a certain state of facts, subsequently amends it by alleging another state of facts inconsistent with the first, he abandons or cancels the first averment, and it is virtually stricken by the allowance of the amendment. The better practice would be to take an order striking the first allegation from the declaration, or else enlai’ge the amendment so as expressly to expunge that allegation or substitute the new matter for it.
Judgment affirmed, with direction.