107 Wis. 291 | Wis. | 1900
1. Upon the opening of the trial of the case, the court, upon oral application of the defendant, without any fact'being shown to excuse the delay, and without imposing terms, allowed an amendment to the answer setting up the statute of limitations as to the six months’ rent which accrued between Hay 14 and November 14, 1891.
The statute allowing amendments upon the trial is a broad and sweeping one, and is in very frequent use in the trial courts. It gives the trial.court full power to allow amendments of the pleadings upon the trial “in furtherance of justice and upon such terms as may be just.” Stats. 1898, sec. 2830. The matter is left to the sound discretion of the trial court to decide whether the proposed amendment is in furtherance of justice, and, if so, upon what condition the amendment is to lie granted. With this discretion this court will not interfere, except in cases of abuse thereof. Illinois S. Co. v. Budzisz, 106 Wis. 499. The rule has long . been established in this court that there is a substantial difference between such defenses as usury and the statute of limitations and other ordinary defenses, especially when application is made to the court for favor or indulgence by way of amendment. Morgan v. Bishop, 61 Wis. 407, and cases cited. While the court has the same power to allow amendments setting up such defenses, the question whether such an amendment, setting up what is considered a hard and unconscionable defense and savors of a harsh penalty, is in fact in furtherance of justice, is necessarily a very different question from that which arises when application is made
2. Upon the opening of the case the plaintiff was called as a witness, and examined simply as to the alleged sale of the overcoat and suit of clothes by him to one Gordon, upon the promise of the defendants to pay for the same. Upon cross-examination the defendant’s attorney proceeded to ask him numerous questions as to the receiving of checks by the plaintiff from the defendant in August and September, 1891, before the alleged sale of the clothes, and also in the year 1892. These questions were properly objected to as not proper cross-examination, but the objections were overruled. It is plain that the cross-examination did not relate to any matter gone into on the direct examination, but related to the affirmative defense of payment of the rent, and the
3. Upon the cross-examination of the plaintiff, the defendant’s counsel asked the plaintiff if there had not been trouble between himself and the defendant, and the plaintiff denied that there had been any trouble. Thereupon the following proceedings took place: “ Q. You were a witness, were you not, in the case of the state against M. Y. Sullivan, charged with larceny in that store from M. L. Collins? (Objected to as incompetent and immaterial, and not cross-examination.) The Court: What is the object, General ? Gen. Bragg: I don’t care to tell the witness the object. I think the ques* tion is proper. We will find before we get through with
It was entirely competent to show by cross-examination that there was ill feeling between the plaintiff and defendant, or that trouble had occurred between them, and the general character of the trouble; but it was not competent for counsel to inject into the case, by statement or insinuation, charges of lying, theft, and perjury, such as these. Cases are not so tried, at least in countries which found their jurisprudence upon the English common law. This court-has had occasion to condemn such a manner of trying cases. Sutton v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 98 Wis. 157. Nor ought it to remain for this court upon appeal to condemn such tactics. The trial court should at the outset have decisively called counsel to order, and stopped such remarks, and it distinctly fails in its duty when it does not do so at once and effectively. The mere sustaining of objections, without, fitting rebuke, is no adequate remedy for the evil. The least that a self-respecting court can do under such circumstances is to stop such practice in the presence of the jury, and not allow it to proceed with simply a perfunctory sustaining of objections. When counsel thus throws into the-case such charges and insinuations, with the added weight
4. The court, among other things, charged the jury as follows, and exception was duly taken to the instruction: “ If the jury finds from the evidence that this action is merely an attempt to defraud, hinder, and oppress the defendant Collins, they will find for the defendant.” We have-been unable to find in the case, either in the way of evidence- or lack of evidence, anything which would justify" the giving of this-instruction. While the plaintiff’s claim was old, and subject to the criticism that it was stale, still there was-certainly enough testimony in its support to entitle it to be-fairly submitted to the jury for decision without the implication contained in this instruction. The propriety of such an instruction in any case may well be doubted. What the-jury would understand by it is certainly questionable. It. may well be that some jurymen would understand that, even if the plaintiff had a valid claim against the defendant, still,, if his only object in bringing the action was to hinder and oppress the defendant, and otherwise the action would not have been brought, the plaintiff could not recover. This is-not the law. The motive of the plaintiff cuts no figure, if he is doing a lawful act (Metzger v. Hochrein, ante, p. 267), and the bringing of an action upon a valid claim is an entirely lawful act. So the test is, Did the plaintiff prove his cause of action? If he did, he should recover, whatever his motive; and, if he did not, he should not recover, not because his motive was bad, but because he did not prove his case. We regard the instruction as it stands as not justified by the evidence, and also as distinctly misleading. If it were to be given in any case, there should be added to it a sufficient qualification which would inform the jury that, if
There are other errors alleged, but it is believed that what has been said furnishes a sufficient guide for the retrial of ■the case. It is not a difficult or complicated case. The issues are simple, and call only for the application of well-established rules.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded for a new trial.