Strock v. Little

33 Pa. 409 | Pa. | 1859

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Read, J.

The remedies at common law in courts of justice were by actions, which were divided into real, personal, and mixed; and which by our revised act are reduced to two classes, real and personal. Personal actions are divided into actions ex contractu and ex delicto. Under the former head, Chitty treats of four, assumpsit, debt, covenant, and detinue; and under the latter, of case, trover, replevin, and trespass. All these actions, or forms of action, are specifically appropriated to the redress of certain specified private wrongs, which fall under some one or more of these subdivisions. If, therefore, a wrong form of action is selected, as assumpsit on a sealed instrument, instead of debt or covenant, *410the mistake is a fatal one, and the common law gave no power to the courts to change the wrong form of action into the right one. No statute of jeofails, or of amendment, ever reached this fundamental error. The same rule has always prevailed in Pennsylvania, and our Act of 1806 applies only to the declaration and the subsequent pleadings. The leading rule to be extracted from the cases is, that when the cause of action is substantially the same, the mode of setting it out may be amended, but the nature or form of the action cannot be changed: Smith v. Smith, 5 Barr 254.

Account render is not treated of by Chitty, although the form of proceeding is given at length in Godfrey v. Saunders, 3 Wils. 94, being superseded in England by the more convenient proceeding in equity. In this state, it has been extensively used, and has been the subject of several Acts of Assembly: Brightly’s Dig. 20, 21. It is an action ex contractu, and there must be evidence of a privity, either by contract express or implied, or by law; and it does not lie against a wrongdoer, or any other person, where no privity exists. At common law, there are two judgments, the first of quod computet, and the second that he pay what he is found to be in arrear by the auditors. By our arbitration law, this action may he arbitrated, and the arbitrators must annex to their report an account, which shall result in the balance reported in their award. After judgment quod computet, the court may either appoint auditors, or impannel a jury, to settle the accounts of the parties, and find the balance due the plaintiff or defendant. On the application of either party, and interrogatories filed, the court may require the adverse party to disclose on oath his knowledge of such facts as shall, in the opinion of the court, be necessary for a just and equitable settlement of the controversy; and on the party so called on refusing to answer, the facts stated by the adverse party in his interrogatory shall be taken as admitted.

It is clear, therefore, that not only the form of action, but the proceedings, in account render, differ radically from assumpsit, debt, or covenant; and that it is devoted to a peculiar class of cases, which cannot be tried under either of those forms of action. The change from one of the three to account render, would be quite as radical, as from covenant for purchase-money to ejectment.

In the present case, the action was assumpsit, and upon discovering that the true cause of action could only be tried in account render, the court changed the form of action from assumpsit to account render, and the pleadings and other proceedings were conducted, as if the latter had been the original form of action. For this, there is no warrant, either in the common law, or in any act of the legislature, and the judgment must be reversed.

Judgment reversed, declaration and pleadings, and proceedings in account render, quashed, and a venire de novo aw'arded.

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