66 Neb. 115 | Neb. | 1902
This was an action in replevin originally instituted by the plaintiff, Pekin Plow Company, against the defendant Frank E. Parks, a retail dealer in farm machinery at Lincoln, Nebraska. During the pendency of the action the defendant Parks was adjudged a bankrupt and the defendant Claude S. Wilson was permitted to intervene and defend the action as trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Frank E. Parks. At the conclusion of the testimony offered in the court below the trial judge directed a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff brings error to this court.
The action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the defendant, and only submitting the question of the amount of damages to the jury, is alleged against as error by the plaintiff in error. It appears from the record that on the 15th day of October, 1900, the plaintiff instituted a replevin action by filing a petition and affidavit Avhich alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff had sold the farm implements in controversy to the defendant Parks under a contract in which it retained a lien for the unpaid purchase price of the implements sold and delivered to the defendant, and that a copy of the supposed contract, containing this condition, was filed with the petition and affidavit, and the action instituted on the theory that plaintiff had a special property in the goods replevied. It appears that the action was originally instituted on information which plaintiff’s attorney received from Messrs. Margaret & Stevens, who were managers of an Omaha buggy com
■ It is suggested by defendant in error that the record fails to show that plaintiff actually filed its amended petition after leave had been given it by the trial court, but that, on the contrary, it appears that the amended petition was filed before leave had been given, and then after
It is next urged that plaintiff’s original petition and affidavit alleged a special ownership in the goods replevied, and that it could not he permitted to amend such petition and affidavit by alleging a general ownership, without dismissing its original cause of action and returning the goods to the defendant, and that the filing of the amended petition amounted to a discontinuance of the original cause of action. In this state the right to amend seems to be as liberally accorded in replevin as in other actions. In Tackaberry v. Gilmore, 57 Nebr., 450, it was held that a petition in replevin might be amended by alleging a special instead of a general ownership of the property. If it be permitted to amend by alleging a special ownership, when a general ownership had formerly been alleged, we can see no reason why the rule should not be applied and an amendment permitted, when requested, to change the allegation from a special to a general ownership, as was done in the case at bar.. When an amended petition and affidavit are permitted to be filed they relate back to the commencement of the action, so that a new cause of action need not he instituted, nor a redelivery of the property made, as antecedent • to the right to amend. Swain v. Savage, 55 Nebr., 687; Lewis v. Connolly, 29 Nebr., 222; Kimball v. Silvers, 22 Mo. App., 520, 525.
It is also urged by defendant in error that plaintiff’s amended petition and affidavit is insufficient on its face to support a judgment, because it fails to specifically set out the fraudulent representations on which plaintiff relied at the time the sale of the goods was made. As a general rule, in actions in which fraud is alleged, this objec
An examination of a long line of authorities submitted by the learned counsel for each of these litigants, leads us to the conclusion that the doctrine of election of remedies only applies when a party who actually has at hand two inconsistent remedies and with full knowledge of such fact proceeds to enforce one of these remedies, in which event he is bound by such election. But if in his first action he has adopted a mode of redress incompatible with the facts in his case, and .is defeated on that ground, he is still free to proceed anew, or, as said by this court in State v. Bank of Commerce, 61 Nebr., 22, “if the law gives but one remedy to a party, he is not precluded from resorting to that because he has attempted to avail himself of another to Avhich he was not entitled.” The rule seems to be well set forth in 7 Encylopedia Pleading & Practice, 366, as follows: “If, in attempting and designing to make an election, one puts forth an act or commences an action in ignorance of substantial facts which proffer an alternate remedy, and the knoAvledge of which is essential to an intelligent choice of procedure, his act or action is not binding. He may, when informed, adopt a different remedy.” This doctrine seems to be supported by the holdings of this court in State v. Bank of Commerce, supra, and City of Omaha v. Redick, 61 Nebr., 163; and also in Kittredge v. Holt, 58 N. H., 191; Nysewander v. Lowman, 24 N. E. Rep. [Ind.], 355; Kraus v. Thompson,
We therefore recommend that the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
By the Court: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
44 Am. Rep., 182.