181 Mass. 468 | Mass. | 1902
This is an action for the price of coal alleged to have been sold to the late Benjamin F. Butler and to his partner Boynton. The case was sent to an auditor and is reported to this court by a judge of the Superior Court, with a finding that the facts are as stated by the auditor, and with an agreement for the amount of the judgment if upon the facts the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Two questions only are argued by the defendants: whether the action can be maintained against the present defendants, and whether the contract declared on is made out.
The suit was begun against Butler and Boynton. On March 11, 1898, the death of Butler was suggested, and on August 8, 1894, instead of treating their testator’s estate as discharged by his death from the suit upon the joint contract, his adminis
We are of opinion that the ruling asked was wrong. The argument for it is that although the statute cited preserved the liability of General Butler’s estate “as if the contract had been joint and several,” it did not preserve the liability to a joint suit. But this argument tacitly assumes that the essence of the present cause of action is liability to a joint suit, which is a mistake. The essence is liability under the contract, with all its incidents. A suit .begun as joint may become several by death. There is no reason why it should not become so also by amendment if the amendment is allowed. There is no reason why a suit begun on a contract as several should not be amended into a suit upon it as joint. And if persons are joined who all are liable upon it, and where the only objection to the joinder is the difference in the form of the proper judgments against them respectively, Colt v. Learned, 133 Mass. 409, 411, there is no reason against allowing an amendment so that only one of them shall be sued.
The administrators by appearing did not attempt to impose upon the estate a liability which did not exist, as in Mellen v. Baldwin, 4 Mass. 480. They merely brought themselves before the court in respect of a matter for which they were liable and thus laid the foundation for an amendment which put the suit into its proper form.
Richer v. Gerrish, 124 Mass. 367, is relied on by the defend
The fact that the discontinuance against Boynton was after; the special statute of limitations would have run in favor of Butler’s administrators but for their appearance is immaterial. See Costelo v. Crowell, 134 Mass. 280; East Tennessee Land Co. v. Leeson, 178 Mass. 206.
The other objection is that the contract declared on is not made out. The only ground pressed by the defendant is that the sale was made by receivers while the plaintiff’s property was in their hands. If other objections had been urged, it might have been necessary to discharge the report as not sufficiently finding the facts, and possibly it may be necessary with regard to this one. But we hardly should expect the point to be pressed, seeing that if it were sound the defect could be cured by an amendment. Hayward v. Leeson, 176 Mass. 310, 326.
We express no opinion as to whether the objection is well founded. If the defendants deem it desirable to raise further question as to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the suit, the report will be recommitted for a fuller statement of the relation of the plaintiff to the contract, or an amendment may be made. Otherwise judgment will be entered for the plaintiff according to the agreement.
Ordered accordingly.