208 P. 591 | Mont. | 1922
delivered the opinion of tbe court.
Action in conversion. It may be designated as a companion case to tbe case entitled Noe v. Cameron, 62 Mont. 527, 205 Pac. 256. That was an action by tbe plaintiff in tbis case for damages for alleged breaches of tbe covenants of a lease executed to tbe plaintiff by Cameron, tbe defendant, of hotel property situate in tbe town of Broadview, in Yellowstone county. It was commenced on March 28, 1918.
Among other defenses interposed by Cameron was a counterclaim for damages for tbe abandonment of tbe premises by plaintiff wherein he alleged that be bad lost the difference in tbe rent stipulated for in tbe lease and tbe maximum of the rental value of tbe premises under tbe conditions then prevailing, amounting to tbe sum of $1,800, for which be demanded judgment. An understanding of tbe controversy in that, as well as in tbis case, may be bad by a reference to tbe statement contained in tbe opinion, supplemented by tbe following: Tbe lease involved in that case included a chattel mortgage upon tbe personal property, then in tbe hotel building, which bad been purchased by tbe plaintiff from Cameron at tbe time it was executed, and covering all additions to it thereafter made by the plaintiff, to secure tbe payment of tbe rent during tbe time of tbe lease, fixed at $200 per month, payable monthly in advance. When tbe plaintiff quit the premises, on January 1, 1918, and surrendered them to Cameron, be moved all of tbe property purchased by him during bis occupancy and sought to remove what be bad purchased from Cameron, but was prevented from doing so by tbe defendant Barr, one of tbe deputies of defendant Matlock, the sheriff of Yellowstone county, who bad in bis bands a certified copy of tbe mortgage for the purpose of foreclosing tbe same to en
The complaint is in the usual form, alleging that plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $2,500. The defendants, after putting in issue the allegations of the complaint, alleged justification of their actions under the chattel mortgage. The plaintiff, assuming the justification to be new matter, filed a reply, but not until after the expiration of the twenty days provided by the statute, no default having been entered against him in the meantime. On December, 13, 1918, on motion of defendants, this reply was stricken out. The grounds of the motion were: That the reply had not been filed in time and that the facts alleged in it did not “constitute a defense” to the new matter alleged in defendant’s answer. At the same time plaintiff moved for permission to file a “supplemental” reply. This latter motion was granted on May 26, 1919. On December 12, 1918, the case of Noe v. Cameron had been tried and determined, the judgment denying plaintiff the right to recover damages and adjudging the defendant’s counterclaim to be without merit.
The so-called “supplemental reply” was filed after leave granted by the court. By it the plaintiff set up the judgment in the case of Noe v. Cameron as a conclusive adjudication against Cameron’s claim for rent assumed ‘to be due for the month of January, 1918, and therefore against his right to foreclose the mortgage.
The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, wherein his damages were assessed at $1,500, and judgment was entered thereon for the amount thereof, together with costs. Defendants have appealed from the judgment and an order denying them a new trial. They contend that the court erred to their prejudice in permitting the filing of the supplemental reply,
1. In our view of the ease, the rulings of the court in striking the reply from the files and thereafter permitting a “supplemental reply” to be filed becomes unimportant. The default of the plaintiff had not been entered at the time the reply was filed, although the plaintiff was two days late under the statute in filing the same. The so-called “supplemental reply” was filed with leave of court, and, conceding, but not deciding, that the court erred in permitting the “supplemental reply” to be filed, yet the defendants assumed the burden of showing justification by virtue of the chattel mortgage as pleaded in their answer. Having failed to establish justification, the question of whether there was a proper reply to the answer is of no consequence.
2. The court was in error in admitting in evidence the judgment-roll in the case of Noe v. Cameron, for the reason that the judgment therein had not become final, the ease being then pending on appeal in this court. Section 9821, Kevised Codes of 1921, provides: “An action is deemed to be pending from the time of its commencement until its final determination upon appeal, or until the time for appeal has passed, unless the judgment is sooner satisfied.”
Though a judgment is defined as the final determination of the rights of the parties (Id., see. 9313), the action must be regarded as still pending, within the meaning of the section quoted above, until final determination on appeal or until the time for appeal has passed. (Peterson v. City of Butte, 44 Mont. 129, 133, 120 Pac. 231.) However, in our opinion, the error was nonprejudicial to the defendants. Here, as in the former case, the status of Cameron’s legal rights at the time are necessary to be considered. The question at issue was whether the taking of the property and sale thereof by the defendants was authorized; and, from the proof, independent of the judgment-roll in the case of Noe v. Cameron, it
3. The errors assigned by defendants because of the instructions to the jury given and refused are not necessary to be discussed in view of what has already been said. We have examined them, and find no error to have been committed by the court.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.