124 A. 567 | Vt. | 1924
This case comes here from the Burlington city court. The action is contract in the form of general counts with specifications. The complaint contains the additional allegations that the plaintiff is the actual bona fide owner of the account stated in the specifications, said account having been assigned to him on a certain day by one Hill for money loaned to said Hill by the plaintiff. The answer was the general denial. There was a trial by court with judgment for defendant.
The plaintiff offered to show by Hill that witness sold the defendant the goods described in the specifications. The court sustained defendant's objection that no such testimony could be given under the complaint and excluded the offered testimony, to which the plaintiff excepted.
Thereupon the defendant asked the court for leave to amend *530 the complaint by alleging in proper language a sale of the goods in question by Hill to the defendant, the latter's promise to pay therefor on demand, the subsequent assignment of such indebtedness by Hill to the plaintiff when and how the plaintiff acquired title thereto, and that he is the actual bona fide owner thereof. The court refused to allow the amendment on the ground that it was for a new cause of action, to which ruling plaintiff excepted.
The offered testimony was manifestly outside the issues made by the pleadings without the amendment, and so was properly excluded. Evidence is to be received only as it bears upon the issue. Brown v. Aitken,
The remaining exception raises the question whether the proposed amendment was for the same cause of action. By G.L. 1796, pleadings may be amended in matter of substance at any stage of the proceedings under the direction and in the discretion of the court. That the amendment was not denied as a matter of discretion is apparent from the record.
The holding that it introduced a new cause of action amounts to a ruling as matter of law which is reviewable under the exceptions saved.
The test to be applied is whether the proposed amendment is a different matter or the same matter more fully or differently laid. If found to be the latter, the amendment is proper; if the former, it is not. Schlitz v. Lowell Mutual Fire Ins. Co.,
We are not at liberty to presume, in support of the ruling, that the trial court inquired outside the record and found it to be a different subject-matter, as is sometimes permissible(Patterson's Admr. v. Modern Woodmen of America,
The additional allegations of the complaint serve to identify the subject-matter of the suit as an indebtedness from the *531 defendant to Hill of which the plaintiff is the bona fide owner as assignee.
It follows that the proposed amendment did not present a new cause of action, but related to the same matter "more fully and differently laid," bringing the case within the rule that permits amendment to be made, and within the provisions of G.L. 1800, authorizing an assignee of a non-negotiable chose in action to sue thereon in his own name.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.