This аppeal arises on certiorari to the Court of Appeals to review an affirmance by that court pursuant to its Rule 36. See
Stroud v. Elias,
Respondents filed suit agаinst petitioner for the breach of a lease agreement alleging that petitioner had failed to deliver possession of the premises. Respondents prayed for actual and punitive damages as a result of petitioner’s breach of contract.
Petitioner filed a timely answer and counterclaim. Respondents demanded a jury trial. Petitioner and his counsel inadvertently failed to appear at the trial, and his answer and counterclaim were stricken pursuant to respondents’ motion to strike. Respondents presented their case on damages to a jury and were awarded $8,650 actual damages and $30,000 in punitive damages, the full amount of their prayer. This was made the judgment of the court. No transcript of this trial was made.
Petitioner filed a motion for new trial and a motion to set aside the judgment two days later. Following the denial of these motions, petitioner appealed directly to the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment without opinion.
The question we are concerned with on certiorari is whether a “new or additional claim for relief’ as provided for in Code Ann. § 81A-105 (a) can be raised at trial as an “issue” pursuant to Code Ann. § 81A-115 (b) thus allowing an appellate court, without a transcript, to assume thаt evidence was offered at the trial authorizing the damages awarded by the jury.
1. At the heart of petitioner’s argument is the following code *192 section: “Exemplаry damages can never be allowed in cases arising on contracts.” Code Ann. § 20-1405.
Petitioner contends that respondents would have necessarily had to hаve made out a case in tort to recover punitive damages and that such additional or new tort claim would have had to have been served on him рursuant to Code Ann. § 81 A-105 (a) even though he was in default. We agree and reverse.
Code Ann. § 81 A-105 (a), requiring service of “new or additional claims” on a defendant in default is based on notions of fairness. 2 Moore’s Federal Practice Par. 5.05, 1338. “Hence, if the defendant fails to appear and the plaintiff amends his complaint, by inserting a new or an additional claim fоr relief, a copy of the amended complaint must be served in the same manner as a summons.” Id. (Emphasis supplied.)
Code Ann. § 81A-115 (b) would allow amendment of the plеadings to conform to the evidence presented at trial if an issue was tried by the express or implied consent of the parties. “Express consent may be found in a stipulation or pre-trial order. Implied consent usually is found where one party raises an issue material to the other party’s case, or wherе evidence is introduced without objection.” 3 Moore’s Federal Practice Par. 15.13[2], 15-174-175. Accord,
Carreras v. Austell Box Board Corp.,
Absent express or implied consent to the trial of an issue not contained in the pleadings, an amendment must be served on the opposite party pursuant to Code Ann. § 81A-105 (a). The question then becomes whether a defеndant in default and not present at the trial of the case can be held to have “consented” to the amendment of the pleadings to conform to thе evidence presented in his or her absence.
In
Lambert v. Gilmer,
“ ‘A judgment by default properly entered against parties sui juris operates as an admission by the defendаnt of the truth of the definite and certain allegations and the fair inferences and conclusions of fact to be drawn from the allegations of the declаration. Conclusions of law, and facts not well pleaded and forced inferences are not admitted by a default judgment.’ ”
Summerour v. Medlin,
So far as this petitioner is concerned, he was put on notice that respondents considered their contract with him breached as a result of his failure to deliver possession of the premises to them, and that they suffered embarrassment, inconvenience, and unnecessary еxpense as a result of the alleged acts of petitioner. These facts are admitted as true by virtue of petitioner’s default. These admitted facts dо not, however, correctly give rise to the conclusion of law that respondents are entitled to punitive damages.
We hold then that in this particular cаse, respondents would either have had to allege sufficient additional facts in their original complaint to have made out a case in tort (e.g., a сase of fraud) so as to authorize the recovery of punitive damages, or they would have had to serve petitioner pursuant to Code Ann. § 81 A-105 (b) with an amendment setting out a case in tort as is required by Code Ann. § 81A-105 (a). The record affirmatively shows that neither was done, and we accordingly reverse the award of $30,000 in punitive damáges.
What has been said so far in this opinion necessarily overrules Division 2 of the recent Court of Appeals opinion in
Randall & Blakely v. Krantz,
2. Petitioner complains that one respondent, Turner, should not be allowed to recover against him as he was not a signatory to the lease sued upon, nor do the facts alleged within the сomplaint demonstrate any relationship on which Turner might have established any right of recovery regarding the subject transaction of *194 this lawsuit. A copy of the lеase, signed by only two of the three respondents and petitioner, was attached to the complaint and made a part thereof.
We note herе, as noted in Division 1, that a default on the part of the defendant serving to eliminate his answer to the complaint admits only the well-pleaded allegations оf the complaint and the fair inferences and conclusions of fact to be drawn therefrom. Reviewing this complaint, we conclude that it affirmatively shows thаt no claim in fact existed which could allow Turner to recover from petitioner. A motion to set aside the judgment will lie if the pleadings affirmatively show that no claim in fact existed. Code Ann. § 81A-160 (d).
The judgment must be set aside as to Turner. As the actual damages awarded to all three respondents cannot be divided between Mrs. Elias and Mrs. Jаckson, the case must be retried to determine the amount of actual damages due those two respondents as a result of petitioner’s admitted breach of contract.
Judgment reversed.
