Respondent brought an action seeking relief against the St. Louis — San Francisco Railway Company (Frisco) in two counts. On the morning of trial respondent dismissed Count I based on trespass and proceeded to trial on Count II requesting ejectment. The real estate involved is an approximately 2⅛⅞ acre triangular tract where Frisco installed a communications tower known as a “microwave repeater station”. During respondent’s evidence he sought to amend to change the legal description of the property from which he sought to eject Frisco. That request was denied. At the close of respondent’s evidence, Frisco’s motion for a directed verdict was sustained. Respondent then filed a motion for new trial, which the trial court sustained, finding that it “erred in failing to permit amendment of pleadings to conform to evidence since defendant Frisco should not have been surprised by the amendment.” Frisco appealed from that order. Following a merger in which appellant was the surviving corporation, appellant was substituted for Frisco.
Appellant has three points relied on. Point one claims that the trial court’s order was erroneous because there was no evidence for the amendment to “conform to”; because respondent’s request to amend did not ask to amend to conform to the evidence; because the request was insufficient as it only requested to change the legal description without specifying the requested change; and because no proposed amendment was ever tendered. We do not know what, if any, evidence the court was referring to in its order, but we do not think that is material if its discretion was not abused. The order may have intended to refer to the offer of the exhibit that triggered the objection resulting in the re *457 quest for amendment, and it was a fair inference from the bench conference when the amendment was requested that evidence that the tower was improperly located would have been offered if the amendment was allowed. We believe that the record sufficiently shows how respondent intended to amend, if allowed, and that a specific amendment was not offered because the court stated it would not allow it. Respondent’s counsel stated that he was trying to show that Frisco had not located the tower on the land described in its easement but on other land owned by respondent. The petition had alleged that the tower was on the land described in a document purporting to grant an easement and respondent sought to amend to allege it was on other land. Point one is denied.
We next consider point two. There appellant contends that the court’s order granting a new trial was erroneous because respondent did not make a submissible case on ejectment since the evidence disclosed that Frisco used the property “as a communications tower which was a permanent structure devoted to a public purpose and the Frisco having the right of eminent domain granted by the legislature cannot be ousted by ejectment”. Appellant cites under this point
Rivard v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co.,
After specifically listing some affirmative defenses, Rule 55.08, V.A.M.R., provides that a party must plead “any other matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense.” If a defendant intends to raise a defense based on facts not included in the allegations necessary to support the plaintiff’s case, they must be pled under Rule 55.08.
Layman v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
The evidence of Frisco’s use did not create any unpleaded issues at trial. When evidence is relevant to an issue already in the case and there is no indication that the party who introduced it was seeking to raise a new issue, pleadings are not amended by implication or consent under Rule 55.33(b), V.A.M.R.
Gee v. Gee,
Point three contends that the court correctly overruled respondent’s motion to amend during trial and it was a gross abuse of discretion to now allow an amendment “in that the plaintiff vacillated for five years and five amended petitions between theories of trespass and ejectment and on the morning of trial elected to proceed in ejectment .. ., and having failed to sustain that theory, attempted to abandon that theory for some other unannounced or unarti-culated theory.”
The trial court by exercising its discretion to refuse an amendment during trial does not preclude its later contrary action on a motion for new trial.
Ray-Carroll County Grain Growers, Inc. v. Nickell,
The order granting a new trial is affirmed and the cause remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
