162 A. 260 | Pa. | 1932
Argued April 28, 1932. Plaintiff brought an action in assumpsit against the defendant to recover the sum of $3,833 with interest. In her statement she joined two separate causes of action, one arising ex contractu, and the other ex delicto. Defendant filed an affidavit of defense raising questions of law. This was sustained and judgment entered for defendant. Plaintiff appealed.
In her statement, plaintiff averred that she loaned her daughter, Mary S. Brill, sums of money aggregating $1,385 to enable the latter to equip a tea room. A short time afterwards the daughter married the defendant, and about five weeks later, the defendant took over his wife's tea room and then sold the furniture, assets and *336 good-will. At the time defendant took over the tea room, plaintiff presented to the defendant a note for $1,385 which plaintiff's daughter had given her as evidence of the indebtedness of the sums of money advanced. Plaintiff's statement avers that this "note defendant orally promised and agreed to pay out of the assets of the business, when it was sold."
While Mary S. Brill was conducting the tea room the plaintiff also loaned her various articles of furniture. These articles were in the shop at the time possession of the shop was taken by defendant, and, prior to the sale of the shop, the defendant orally agreed to return to the plaintiff all of these articles. The value of these articles was $2,448. Plaintiff avers that constant demand for the return of these articles has been made, but defendant has wholly failed and refused to return them. In the affidavit of defense raising questions of law, it is set forth that the first cause of action avers a verbal promise by the defendant to pay the debt of another, and yet no averment is made that there was any memorandum in writing of the agreement or any consideration and no averment as to the date, terms or character of the note which plaintiff claims was delivered to the defendant upon defendant's verbal promise to pay the amount thereof and no copy of the note is attached to the statement of claim, and no averment is made that efforts to collect from the principal debtor have been exhausted. The affidavit also avers that the cause of action arising from the failure of the defendant to return certain chattels is not a cause of action that can be prosecuted in an action of assumpsit, and further that plaintiff is pressing two unrelated claims in one action. The court below held that there was a joinder of two distinct causes of action and cited the established proposition that a cause of action arising ex contractu cannot be joined with a cause of action arising ex delicto: 1 C. J., pages 1065, 1066, paragraph 209. *337
Under the Act of 1887, P. L. 271, the actions of debt, assumpsit, or covenant are consolidated into one form of action called an "action of assumpsit," and actions of trespass, trover or trespass on the case must be brought in the one "action of trespass."
The defendant properly attacked the misjoinder in plaintiff's statement by an affidavit of defense raising questions of law under the Practice Act of 1915; formerly this question would have been raised by demurrer: Walnut Coal Company v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.,
However, it is a rule of law that "if the pleader attempts to state a second cause of action and fails to do so, there is no misjoinder, as but one good cause of action is stated": 14 Standard Enc. of Proc. 648; Sullivan v. N.Y., N.H. H. R. R. Co., 11 Fed. 848.
There is no doubt that the first cause of action of the plaintiff is insufficiently stated; as now stated, it is within the prohibitions of the statute of frauds as being a promise to answer for the debt of another without there being any memorandum in writing of this agreement, signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person by him authorized. In Nugent v. Wolfe,
If the defendant bought out the business of his wife and as a consideration therefor agreed to pay his wife's debt of $1,385, that fact is not pleaded. As the record stands, there is only one good cause of action pleaded in this statement. This being so, there is no misjoinder.
"It is only where the complaint states two or more good causes of action that a demurrer will lie for this cause [misjoinder]; not where an unsuccessful attempt *339 is made to state a second cause": 21 R. C. L. 523, section 84.
In Rhodes v. Terheyden,
We think that in the case before us, the decision of the questions raised by the affidavit of defense did not dispose of the whole of plaintiff's claim, and therefore the judgment should not have been entered for the defendant, but the court should, as the act provides, have made "such other order as may be just." In this case justice requires that the plaintiff be given an opportunity to amend her statement.
The judgment is reversed with a procedendo.