8 Wash. 630 | Wash. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— The respondent in its complaint alleged the issuance of a certain warrant by the city of Port Angeles, directing the treasurer of that city to pay to E. C. Burlingame or bearer the sum of $500. Subsequent portions of the complaint were as follows:
“3. That thereafter by several assignments and endorse*632 ments written on the back of the said warrant above set forth, the said warrant came into the possession of this plaintiff for presentation to and collection of the amount due thereon from the said city of Port Angeles. ’ ’
Appellant answered:
“That whether said warrant came into the hands of plaintiff as alleged in paragraph No. 3, this defendant has no knowledge or information sufficient whereof to form a belief, and he therefore denies the same.”
This denial was insufficient to raise an issue, constituting as it did a negative pregnant. It is an admission that the warrant came into the hands of respondent in some manner for the purposes alleged. Bliss, Code PL, § 332.
The fourth paragraph of the complaint is as follows:
“That thereafter, the plaintiff desiring to have presented and collected the said warrant as aforesaid, forwarded and delivered unto the bank of Port Angeles into the hands of one B. F. Schwartz, the then manager of said bank, the said warrant with the following indorsement thereon, to wit: ‘For collection and credit, account of Seattle National Bank, Seattle, Wash. Signed: Robert Gr. Hooker, Cashier,’ ”
The answer to this paragraph was:
“That whether the matters and things set forth in paragraph No. 4 in plaintiff’s complaint are true or false defendant has no knowledge or information sufficient whereof to form a belief, and he therefore denies the same.”
It is contended that this paragraph of the answer did not constitute a general or specific denial of each allegation of the complaint, and it was probably by following the construction contended for by the respondent that the court reached its conclusion in the case. Other allegations in the complaint and the admission of the answer showed that at the time the action was commenced the warrant was in the possession of the appellant, and the contention of the respondent is, that, inasmuch as the paragraph of the complaint under discussion alleged several distinct matters,
As to the first point, we think the denial of the answer was sufficient. A fair illustration of a defective denial of this kind is found in Collins v. North Side Pub. Co., 20 N. Y. Supp. 892, where the answer, after admitting a single allegation of the complaint, continued with a statement that the pleader had no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to all the other allegations of the complaint and therefore denied the same. It was agreed that this was an insufficient denial because it might have been true that the pleader’s information did not extend to all of the other allegations of the complaint, and still he might have either knowledge or information as to all but one of the allegations. But here it seems to us that the reference to the ‘ ‘ matters and things set forth in paragraph No. 4, ” without the use of the word “all,” ought to be taken as a sufficient denial of each and every of such matters and things.
As to the endorsement, “For collection and credit account of Seattle National Bank,” etc., it is to be noted that the complaint does not allege that the plaintiff endorsed these words upon the warrant, but that it “forwarded and delivered the warrant to the bank of Port Angeles, with the following endorsement thereon;” and the denial goes to the fact of the forwarding and delivery merely. But if it be taken that the allegation is sufficient to cover the fact of endorsement by the respondent, still it would not neces
It seems to us that the fair effect of this denial and others contained in the answer was to put the plaintiff upon its proof of such facts as would entitle it to claim a return of the warrant by appellant under all circumstances, because respondent had never ceased to be rightfully entitled to the possession of it.
Paragraph 5 of the complaint alleged that ‘ ‘ prior to the commencement of this action the said B. F. Schwartz, without authority so to do, and without possessing any right, title or interest in and to said warrant, turned over and delivered the same to the said defendant above named. ’ ’ The paragraph of the answer corresponding to this one of the complaint admits the delivery of the warrant by Schwartz to appellant, but denies his want of authority so to do. We think this denial also raised an issue, although respondent claims that because facts showing the extent of the authority of Schwartz were contained in other portions of the complaint, and because the paragraph of the answer under consideration is not addressed to those facts, the de
Appellant also complains because his denial of the demand alleged to have been made upon him was not considered; but of that he cannot complain, for the reason that it appears by his own admission that he has set himself up to be the owner of the warrant, which absolved the respondent from the necessity of making a demand. Cobbey, Replevin, §§448, 452, 512.
The material matters set out in the affirmative defense of the answer would seem to have been admissible under the denials of the answer, and, therefore, the defense was unnecessary. That another individual was interested in the purchase of the warrant from Schwartz did not make that individual a necessary party to this-action. The respondent being in possession of the warrant and this being an action of replevin, he alone was the necessary defendant. Scott v. McGraw, 3 Wash. 675 (29 Pac. 260).
The judgment entered was in bad form, for the reason that it seemed to authorize the successful party to issue execution against the defendant unless the warrant was forthwith delivered. A judgment in such cases should be for the recovery of the personal property the possession of which was sued for, or in case delivery cannot be had, for
The practice adopted in this case of granting a judgment on the pleadings upon an oral motion, at the time the case was set for trial, is not to be commended. It has been recognized by this court in several cases, in one of which, Port v. Parfit, 4 Wash. 369 (30 Pac. 328), the proper theory of such proceedings is stated, but the portion of the statute there alluded to (Code Proc., §412) expressly provides for a five days’ notice of the time and place of application to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint, where the defendant has appeared. No such notice was given in this case, and in view of the other matters controlling the disposition of the case we only speak of it because it must undoubtedly operate to the surprise of a party who has filed an answer which has been replied to, to have an oral motion of this kind presented at the time when the case is called for trial on the pleadings, which he has until then supposed to be unexceptionable. A motion of this kind is in the nature of a demurrer to the sufficiency of the answer, but when sustained it cuts off the opportunity which a part}'- would otherwise have to amend a pleading wherein a mere technicality may have the effect of depriving him of valuable rights and substantial justice.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for trial upon the pleadings.
Dunbar, C. J., and Hoyt, Anders and Scott, JJ., concur.