Livingston v. L'Engle

22 Fla. 427 | Fla. | 1886

Mr. Justice Raney

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error, by his original declaration filed November 7, 1881, sues the plaintiff in error for that “the plaintiff let to defendant ” two lots of land in the town of LaVilla “ for ten years, to hold from the first day of January, A. D. 1869, at $16 per year, payable semi-annually m advance, all of which rent is still due and unpaid.” On the second day of January, A. D. 1882, defendant pleaded that “ he duly performed and kept the covenants upon his part to be kept and performed by virtue of the said lease until the first day of July, A. D. 1873, when the plaintiff refused to comply with the covenant of said lease and refused to receive rent for and re-entered and ousted the defendant of the possession of the premises demised to him by said lease, and has ever since detained and kept the same from the defendant.” To this plea the plaintiff, on the sixth day of the following February, demurred as bad in substance for the reason that it is “ uncertain and argumentative and in other respects insufficient.”

The plaintiff on the second day of January, 1884, up to which time no further proceedings appear to have been taken in the case, amended his declaration by adding another count, alleging that he “ let to the defendant ” the two lots described “ to hold for ten years from the first day of January, 1869, and the defendant by said deed covenanted with the plaintiff that he would pay all legal taxes and assessments upon said land, to wit: the demised premises, yet the said defendant failed to pay the taxes of the State of *431Florida and county on Duval aforesaid due and assessed on lot four of said premises for the year 1871, amounting to $18.53, which, with interest to date, amounts to $34.19, and which taxes this plaintiff was compelled on June 14, 1873, to pay, and further, the defendant, notwithstanding said covenant to pay taxes, failed and omitted to pay on said demised premises, lots 3 and 4, * due for the year 1872, by reason of which omission the plaintiff was compelled to buy in said premises on July 9, 1875, for nonpayment of said taxes, the amount of such sale being $37.69, which, with interest to date, amounts to $63.22.”

Afterwards the defendant, “ for an additional plea in said cause,” pleaded that the plaintiff was at the commencement of the suit and still is indebted to the defendant in the sum of $880 for the use and occupation of the premises mentioned in the declaration, which sum of money so due from the plaintiff to the defendant as aforesaid exceeds the damages sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the nonperformance by the defendant of the several supposed premises mentioned in said declaration, out of which said sum of money the defendant is ready and willing and hereby offers to set oft’ and allow to the plaintiff the full amount of said damages.”

There are no other pleadings.

A jury was sworn, and having heard the evidence returned a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing his damages at $171.40, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. The judgment recites that the jury were sworn to try the “ issues joined.”

The bill of exceptions has been struck from the record, and consequently there is no evidence before us.

There was a motion for a new trial, the first five grounds of which relate to matters in pais and cannot be considered without a bill of exceptions. The sixth and last ground *432of the motion is that the court erred in striking out the additional plea upon motion ore tenus of plaintiff as not presenting a proper subject of setoff. The motion for a new trial was denied.

Assuming that any notice can be be taken of the motion for a new trial in the absence of a bill of exceptions there is still nothing in the record to show that any order striking out the second plea was ever made. A mere motion for a new trial unsupported by anything in the record, on the ground that a particular action has been taken, is not evidence that such action was taken. A bare denial of the motion is not moreover evidence of such action. For aught that appears in the record, the reason of the Circuit Judge for refusing the motion for a new trial may have been, in so far as this ground is concerned, that the plea referred to was never struck out. According to the record before us this plea stands upon the record the same as the other plea. McNealy and Roulhac vs. State, 17 Fla., 198. We cannot review any such order because none appears to have been made. This disposes of the sixth assignment of error.

It is apparent that there was no issue of fact taken by the plaintiff, upon either of the pleas. It is contended by counsel for defendant in error that this defect has been waived by plaintiffs going to trial without objecting in the lower, court, and that he cannot raise the point primarily in the. appellate court. The decisions of this court upon this question, are as follows:

In Miller & Croom vs. Hoc, 1 Fla., 189, the action was debt upon an attachment bond. There was a, plea of non damnificabas and a reply thereto, but the nature of the replication is not shown by the report. There was no rejoinder to or issue taken upon the replication, and no objection appears. to have been taken to the defect, in the lower court *433in the motion for a new trial or otherwise. It was held that there was no issue which could be submitted to a jury and that the defect was not cured by a verdict. The bill of exceptions recited that the jury had been sworn to speak the truth upon the issues joined ; this, however, it was decided, could not be taken in the face of the record as proving that issues really existed. In Hopkins & Moody vs. Burney, 2 Fla., 42, a plea had been filed and was afterwards withdrawn. Subsequently a jury was sworn to try the issue joined. “ Hitherto,” says the opinion, “ we have considered this case as though the plea of non cepit was in and issue regularly joined upon it, because from the state of the record it appears that parties and the court at the trial below acted under that impression, and because the counsel for plaintiff in error insisted at the argument of the cause that it ought t© be so regarded. But that plea was withdrawn upon the same day it was filed, and now constitutes no part of the pleadings in the case.” It was held that the judgment must be reversed, and as in the former case, that the statute of joefail did not cure the error. McKinnon vs. McCullum, 6 Fla., 376, was a case where the first plea was the general issue not guilty, and the second and third pleas were in confession and avoidance concluding with a verification, but were not replied to, and the decision was that the first plea concluded to the country, and might with propriety have been submitted to the jury had the other pleas been disposed of, but thus to submit it, while the others remained undisposed of, was an error for which, of itself, the ease should be sent back, as it clearly appears they were not abandoned. This case is followed in Benbow vs. Marquis, 17 Fla., 441, where the first plea was the general issue, and there were other pleas concluding with a verification, and to which no replication *434had been filed, the point being raised for the first time in this court.

From these cases it is clear that we must reverse the judgment and send the case back for further proceedings. The pleas are both of new matter and would terminate with a verification if formal conclusions were used now ; and the fact is whether we assume the second plea to have been struck out or not there was no issue before the jury. The first plea required a reply, and not merely a similiter, and if the second plea can stand the same can be said of it. As remarked by Judge Hawkins in Miller & Croom vs. Hoc, supra, though an appellate court will go far to sustain the judgment of the court which tried the cause when upon a view of the whole case it comes to the conclusion that substantial justice has been done between the parties, yet there are fundamental rules governing legal proceedings which cannot be departed from without producing great confusion and evil results. The case of Huling vs. Florida Savings Bank, 19 Fla., 695, holding that the mere absence of a similiter is not ground for an arrest of judgment recognizes the doctrine of the above cases, except that it assumes that perhaps the replication in Miller & Croom vs. Hoc required only a similiter. An assumption that it required more is justifiable. Story on Pleading, 322, 323.

The case of Judge vs. Moore, decided in 1860, 9 Fla., 269, requires some notice. In it there were pleaded at first four pleas and the plaintiff joined issue on the third and fourth, and demurred to the first and second. The demurrer being sustained the defendant pleaded four pleas, to the first of which plaintiff demurred, and to the second of which plaintiff replied with new matter, which replication defendant demurred to. The record did not disclose that either of these demurrers was disposed of or fihat there was any replication to the third and fourth amended pleas. *435There was a trial by jury, verdict and judgment against defendant, who appealed. One of the errors assigned in the appellate court is having the jury sworn and a new trial while the demurrer to the first amended plea and the demurrer to the replication remained undisposed of. There was issue joined as indicated above on the original third and fourth pleas. “We think this error,” says the court by Walker, Associate Justice, “ is not well assigned. It was the duty of the parties before they went to trial to see that the pleadings were made up. To bold thisaserror would be to allow the defendant to take advantage of his own negligence. When the parties went willingly before the jury they must be considered, unless the contrary plainly appears, as having waived all demurrers undisposed of and all pleas, replications, &c., on which issue was not joined.” Taylor vs. Baker, 1 Fla., 255, is cited in support of the above by the Justice delivering the opinion. In Taylor vs. Baker there’was a plea to the second and third counts, and the demurrer to the plea remained undisposed of. “ The plea ” alluded to, says the opinion in Taylor vs. Baker, “ is in effect the general issue which had already been filed, and gave to the defendaat no new advantage which he had not secured by that plea.” In Pearce vs. Jordan, decided in 1861, and reported also in 9th Fla. Repts., p. 526, where there had been two trials, with verdicts varying considerably, one being for $328.80 and the other for $1,133.41, there was a plea of the general issue and a special plea setting forth the contract sued on for cutting and delivering pine saw logs with an averment of damages for the nonperformance of the contract, and also a plea of setoff and of payment of a specified sum of money, concluding with a verification. There was a demurrer to the second plea and a demurrer to the replication to the third plea. The record shows, as in Judge vs. Moore, that, at the time the *436cause was submitted to the jury both of these demurrers remained undisposed of, and also that no issue had been joined on the various pleas, with the exception of that of the general issue. The judgment was reversed upon'the ground that where the pleadings are in such a defective condition as to make it manifest that the jury who tried the cause could not have had an intelligent apprehension of the issues to be tried, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial, “ when the pleadings can be properly made up and the issues presented in an intelligent form.” McKinnon vs. McCullum, is relied upon as sustaining the conclusion reached. Both of these eases were decided by the same court. The latter does not refer to the former; and neither pretends to overrule any of the cases we have cited above. If any doubt can be held to be cast upon McKinnon vs. McCullum, by Judge Dupont in Pearce vs. Jordan, it is clear that McKinnon vs. McCullum has been followed by subsequent cases. The case of Taylor vs. Baker is much like that of Walter vs. Florida Savings Bank, 20 Fla., so far as the purpose served by the special plea to the defendant’s interests.

In the case before us there was no issue at all before the jury, so it is stronger than either McKinnon vs. McCullum or Pearce vs. Jordan or Judge vs. Moore, in this respect.

We do not think it necessary to pass on any other question.

Counsel for appellee argues that it is injustice to the court below in such a case as this to allow parties who have never pointed out the defect to that court but gone to trial on the record,to take advantage of it there. Inadvertence of counsel in a case like this will not result in any reflection upon the trial judge who naturally took it for granted that the issues were properly made up. He would doubtless *437have set aside the verdict had it been called to his attention in time. Substantial errors apparent upon the record, unlike errors as to matter in pais, do not require exceptions on the spot to make them available in the appellate court, but when not waived they will be noticed here without such exception. We cannot refuse to reverse this judgment without upsetting the established practice of this court, which would be injustice to all litigants, and to this and the Circuit Court.

The judgment is reversed.

The Chief Justice dissents as to the point set forth in the third head-note of this decision.