86 Vt. 250 | Vt. | 1912
This was an action of general assumpsit which came into the county court on appeal. The original declaration set up the plaintiff as George Messenger “administrator of all and singular the goods and chattels, rights and credits, which were of one F. E. Spear, deceased, at the time of his death, who died intestate.” The original declaration was in the common counts only and the usual form was used without change, so that the promises counted on were represented as made to the plaintiff rather than to his intestate in consideration of ah indebtedness of the defendants to the plaintiff rather than to his intestate.
In the county court on the entry of the appeal the plaintiff filed an amended declaration not setting up the plaintiff in any new or different character but alleging as the cause of action a promissory note given by the defendants to the plaintiff’s intestate. The ad damnum in both declarations was the same.
The defendant Myron G. Armstrong objected to the filing of the new declaration and moved its dismissal on the ground that it was for a different cause of action than that set up in the original writ. Thereupon the court took testimony and from that determined that the original declaration was for the same cause of action as the amended one, and overruled the motion to' dismiss. To this action of the court an exception was taken
The only question before us is whether the amended declaration was for a new cause of action.
In inquiring outside the record whether or not the two declarations were for the same cause of action the trial court took an approved course. Davis v. Rutland R. Co., 82 Vt. 24, 28, 71 Atl. 724; Lycoming Fire Ins. Co., v. Billings, 61 Vt. 310, 17 Atl. 715; Boyd v. Bartlett, 36 Vt. 9; Hill v. Smith, 34 Vt. 535. 541, 542.
So the finding of the court that the amended declaration'introduced no new caus.e of action is conclusive, unless on the face of the pleadings we must,-as matter of law, hold otherwise than as the trial court found. Sometimes, of course, the pleadings themselves must govern. Brodek v. Hirschfield, 57 Vt. 12; Dewey v. Nicholas, 44 Vt. 24; Carpenter v. Gookin, 2 Vt. 495, 21 Am. Dec. 566.
Here the amendment did not substitute a new party, for the plaintiff did not sue in his individual capacity but in his representative capacity, the capacity in which he seeks to recover in the amended declaration. The indebtedness in question is due from the defendant to the plaintiff in his representative capacity, and the conclusion of the original declaration to the damage of the plaintiff is sufficient. Pope, Admr. v. Stacey, 28 Vt. 96.
The original declaration and the amended declaration differ merely in their averments as to how the indebtedness to the plaintiff administrator arose. On all our authorities no new cause of action was introduced by the amended declaration, and the motion to dismiss it was properly overruled. McDonald v. Webster’s Est., 71 Vt. 392, 45 Atl. 895; Lycoming Fire Ins. Co. v. Billings, 61 Vt. 310, 17 Atl. 715; Myers v. Lyon, 51 Vt. 272; Carter v. Hosford, 48 Vt. 433; Hill v. Smith, 34 Vt. 535; Boyd V. Bartlett, 36 Vt. 9; Allen v. Lyman, 27 Vt. 20; Flowers’s Exr. v. Kent, Brayt. 134.
A case entirely in point is The Executors of the Dulce of Marlborough v. Widmore, 2 Strange, 890. There the plaintiffs declared on a promise to their testator and were allowed to amend by declaring on a promise to themselves. It would have
The motion to dismiss the amended declaration was properly overruled, and, the case having been tried upon its merits,
Judgment is affirmed.