Pierce v. Mitchell

87 Vt. 538 | Vt. | 1914

Taylor, J.

This is an action of assumpsit for damages in an exchange of automobiles. The defendant pleaded the general issue and also a former judgment in bar. In reply to the plea in bar the plaintiff alleged in substance that the cause of action on which the defendant obtained judgment was, as set forth in the plea, an action of trespass on the case for deceit, “that the cause of action now pending * * * is one of special assumpsit on contract and while growing out of the same transaction * * although the said representations and promises were not so made as to amount to deceit, they are sufficient to support an action for breach of contract * * and said judgment iu said deceit action is in no way a bar to said action now pending between *540the parties hereto of special assumpsit for breach of contract.” The replication concludes to the country. The defendant filed two motions for judgment, (1) upon the defendant’s second plea and the plaintiff’s replication thereto, and (2) upon the pleadings in the cause. The court overruled both motions to which several exceptions were allowed and the cause was passed to this Court before trial.

The defendant contends that the replication confesses the plea but does not attempt to avoid the same by allegation of new matter and closes to the country. He argues that it is no answer to the plea, nor any part thereof, and insists that his motion for a judgment should have been sustained. Assuming, though not deciding, that the court might render judgment on the pleadings in case the replication confesses but fails to avoid the plea, it does not follow that it would be reversible error for the court to deny such a motion. It is a question of practice addressed to the discretion of the court, (31 Cyc. 605), and the rule is too well recognized to require citation of authorities that this Court will not review the discretionary action of the trial court except to correct abuse of discretion. The court below may well have overruled the motions as a matter of discretion. By doing so the court was not committed to the theory that the replication was sufficient. It signified no more than that the court was not satisfied that defects, if any there were, could not be cured by the amendment. In the circumstances, it would have been unjust to the plaintiff’to render judgment against him on the pleadings, thus depriving him of an opportunity to amend if necessary; while by denying the motions the rights of the defendant were in no way prejudiced. The replication, though perhaps insufficient if challenged by a demurrer, tends to state an answer to the plea, and so the defendant should have raised the question by demurrer. Hart v. Scott, 168 Ind. 530, 81 N. E. 481.

It was held in Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Adams, 180 U. S. 28, 45 L. ed. 410, 21 Sup. Ct. 251, that motions are generally appropriate only in the absence of remedies by regular pleadings, and cannot be made available to settle important questions of law or to dispose of the merits of the case; and in Mills v. Hart, 24 Colo. 505, 65 Am. St. Rep. 241, 52 Pac. 680, that a motion for judgment on the pleadings could not be substituted for some other plea under the guise of a motion *541for judgment; that such a motion cannot prevail unless, on the facts thereby established, the court can determine the rights of the parties and render final judgment between them; and that, if the replication or other pleadings of the plaintiff failed to state facts sufficient to entitle him to maintain the action, such objections should be raised by demurrer.

If considered on the merits, it seems doubtful whether the defendant would, in any event, be entitled to judgment on the pleadings. The plea alleges a judgment in his favor in an action on the case for deceit, while this action is assumpsit for breach of contract. Though both relate to the same transaction, they are independent causes of action. In the former, to recover, the plaintiff was required to prove scienter. Failing in that judgment would go against him in that action," but that judgment would not bar a recovery for breach of the contract. In the former action the contract now sued on was only matter of inducement. The gist of the action was deceit, while in the case at bar the action is founded upon breach of contract. Slack v. Bragg, 83 Vt. 404, 76 Atl. 148.

The choice to sue in tort for deceit was not an “election of remedies” but the choice of a mistaken remedy. It turned out that he never had the remedy first selected, and so he is not precluded. The pursuit of a remedy which does not exist is no bar. Holbrook v. Quinlan & Co., 84 Vt. 411, 420, 80 Atl. 339; Derosia v. Ferland, 86 Vt. 15, 83 Atl. 271.

It was not error to deny defendant’s motion.

Affirmed and remanded for further proceedings.