10 S.E. 186 | N.C. | 1889
The case on appeal states that, "on the trial before Shipp, J., the defendant, for the purpose of showing that the court did not have jurisdiction of this action, after objection by the plaintiffs, (162) offered inevidence the record of a suit brought in the Superior Court of Wake, by plaintiffs against defendant, in which a judgment of nonsuit was taken, and that the plaintiffs procured a summons in this action, before the nonsuit, on the same day, and that the summons was served upon the defendant in the bar of the court immediately after the nonsuit was entered." . . . "The defendant insisted before Shipp,J., that the magistrate had no jurisdiction, and that this (Superior) court had none, because this suit is for the same cause of action of that pending in the Superior Court at the time the summons was issued in this action. Judge Shipp refused to admit the testimony for the purpose offered, or to submit to the jury any issue with a view to finding the facts on which the question of jurisdiction might arise, to which the defendant excepted." The action was then tried, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiffs, which was set aside and a new trial ordered.
When the case came on for trial again, before Graves, J., at February Term, 1889, of Wake, the defendant renewed the motion to dismiss, *139 assigning the same grounds, but it being made to appear that Judge Shipp had, in fact, overruled the same motion, on the previous trial, the court refused to again entertain it. The defendant excepted; and there being a verdict and judgment against him upon the issues joined, he appealed. The record proper does not show that the motion to dismiss was ever, in fact heard before Judge Shipp, and there is no record of any exception to his ruling on the question of jurisdiction. It does not appear that the parties filed written pleadings, and the record shows no memorandum of the pleas entered by the defendant. But it does appear, that on the trial before Judge Shipp, the jury passed upon the same issue submitted on the last trial, and nothing else (163) was put in issue before the jury.
We gather from the Code (sec. 840, Rules 2, 3, 4, and 15, and sec. 876), that, under the rules provided for the courts of justices of the peace:
1. The pleadings may be oral or written, but if oral, the substance mustbe entered by the justice on his docket.
2. The complaint must state, in a plain and distinct manner, the facts constituting the cause of action. The answer may contain a denial of the whole, or any part, of the complaint, and also notice, in a plain anddirect manner, of any facts constituting a defense or counterclaim.
3. The Code of Civil Procedure respecting forms of actions, and partiesto action, shall apply to justices' courts.
In Blackwell v. Dibbrell,
The pendency of another action when this began, must, under the former practice, have been set up by plea in abatement before pleading to the merits, and now it must be especially averred as a defense, and insisted on, preliminary to a decision upon the merits, though it may be *140
(164) pleaded in the answer, with the denials and allegations of the complaint and other defenses. Hawkins v. Hughes,
If the defendant had relied upon the plea of the statute of limitations or payment as a defense in this action, it will scarcely be questioned that it would have been essential to set them up specially as new (165) matter, at least by memorandum entered. Long v. Bank,
The courts have been liberal in construing pleadings under the Code of Civil Procedure; but even at the February Term of the court, on the hearing before Judge Graves, the defendant still insisted on his motion to dismiss, addressed the court, and did not ask leave to enter his pleas. *141 He might have moved the court to be allowed to make the entry. "The defendant pleads the pendency of an action, founded upon the same cause, when this action was begun." If the court had allowed his motion, two issues, instead of one, might have been submitted; and if the jury found in reference to the first that such action was then pending, they could have been told that it would have been useless to find the amount due the plaintiffs in answer to the second issue. A defendant, in a justice's court, may elect whether he will file a formal answer or rest his defense upon memoranda; but it is due to the plaintiff that he should clearly indicate his ground of defense, so that the former may prepare for reply. In this case, the notice (if there was any) to the plaintiff, was that the defendants maintain that Judge Shipp, on hearing the evidence offered, ought to have allowed his preliminary motion to dismiss, before submitting the general issue to the jury, and that he relied upon his exception, taken at the last term, to his (166) order overruling that motion. After losing upon the merits, defendant cannot expect to be allowed a new trial, to set up a technical defense, as it must be considered, if he owes the debt.
For the reasons given, the defendants cannot claim the benefit of that defense, and the judgment must be
Affirmed.
Cited: Curtis v. Piedmont Co.,