2 Mass. 81 | Mass. | 1806
This question has formerly been settled. A plea bad in part is a bad plea. The defendant has pleaded the statute of limitations in bar of the action, and has not pleaded several pleas of the statute to the several distinct causes of action declared on. The plaintiff could not safely demur, for the bar is substantially and formally pleaded. And he could not regularly •eply in any other manner. Had he proceeded, and to the second
The replication is good.
Emery then moved the Court for leave to plead anew, for the purpose of pleading the statute of limitations to the several counts in the declaration.
[ * 83 ] * Parsons, C. J. The rule of this Court respecting amendments authorizes the plaintiff to amend his declaration at any time before joinder in demurrer, on paying costs, or granting a continuance, at the election of the defendant. The right to amend, then, is of course. But the rule has not taken away the discretionary power of the Court to grant amendments, whenever the justice of the case shall require it.
But I have never known the Court go so far as to grant an amendment or a repleader, after joinder in demurrer, when the proposed amended or new plea does not go to the merits of the action, which cannot generally be said of this plea of the statute of limitatians. If any equitable cause was shown in aid of this motion, as that the defendant has lost the benefit of evidence by the death ór absence of his witnesses, or that his papers have been destroyed or lost, amongst which was. material evidence for him, the Court might be induced to grant it; but without some such ground, it is not to be favored, especially when the action is still open for trial upon the general issue.
vide 1 W. Black. Rep. 35, Willet vs. Atterton. The Court will not set aside a judgment, which had been asigned by mistake, so as to allow defendant to plead the statute of limitations.
The motion was denied.
This is manifestly erroneous.' The plaintiff might well have replied to the plea of the statute of limitations that, so far as it related to the first count, the promissory note therein mentioned was, at the time of the making thereof, attested by a subscribing witness; and so "far as it related to the second and third counts, he might have taken issue, or replied some other exception to the statute, and his replication would not have been double. If the defendant had traversed the exception pleaded, and the issue had been found for him, the plaintiff would have been barred of his action only as to that count to which the issue related ; and if the issue had been found against him, the plaintiff would have been entitled, so far as regarded this finding, to recover only upon that count. And, accordingly, in the case in the text, the plaintiff having replied only to so much of the defendant’s pleas as related to the first count, was, ipon demurrer, entitled only to judgment upon that count in case the general issue should be found for him; and as to the other counts, the defendant was entitled to judgment, inasmuch as the pleas of the defendant, so far as they related to those counts, remained unanswered. — 1 Chitty, Pl. 688, 612, 565.—3 Chitty, 1146, a, 5th Lond. ed.—Stevens on Pleading, 269.—Johns vs. Whitley & Al. 3 Wils. 127.—Little vs. Blunt Suff. March T. 1823, MSS.
Bullard vs. The Nantucket Bank, 5 Mass. Rep. 99.—Haynes & Ux. vs. Morgan 3 Mass. Rep. 208.—Holbrook vs. Pratt, 1 Mass. Rep. 96.
[Note.— The Court in the other counties of the Eastern Circuit was held by Sew all, Thatcher, and Parker, Justices. Parker, J., having been of counsel in the louses wherein questions of tow were reserved, there were no decisions of such causes.]