213 N.W. 536 | Minn. | 1927
The action was in replevin. The complaint alleges plaintiff's ownership in general terms. The answer contains a general denial and specific defenses, and alleges that defendant executed a note secured by a chattel mortgage on the property involved, and that plaintiff claimed the property by virtue of a renewal of said note and mortgage. There is no reply. Over the objection of plaintiff, defendant was permitted to prove payment.
When a plaintiff alleges title generally to the property involved — not indicating definitely the source of his title — the defendant may under a general denial attack the contract or instrument upon which plaintiff relies to prove title. Adamson v. Wiggins,
If we construe the record rightly the trial court granted judgment upon the theory that he had erroneously received the evidence of payment. Judgment will be ordered non obstante only when the evidence is conclusive against the verdict. Here it was not. Judgment will not be ordered for error in either law or procedure committed at the trial. Bosch v. C.M. St. P. Ry. Co.
The record is confusing and had the trial court excluded the evidence upon the trial and the point been made clear that the defense was payment the court would doubtless have permitted an amendment *133
alleging payment. Courts are not inclined to see litigants fail because of a simple defective pleading. The motion for a new trial is pending and will be determined by the trial court. Parker v. Fryberger,
Reversed.