49 Wash. 571 | Wash. | 1908
This suit was brought in the superior court by Charles Yeysey and Marion Veysey, copartners as Veysey Brothers, to recover from the defendant a balance of $848.10, alleged to be due upon account for goods sold and delivered. The defendant answered, admitting a balance of $564.45, and offering to confess judgment for that amount. After issue was thus joined, the original plaintiffs in the action, together with other alleged creditors of the defendant, filed a petition in bankruptcy against the defendant in the district court of the United States for the western district of Washington. This defendant appeared in the bankruptcy proceedings and entered his plea to the petition. During the pendency of the bankruptcy proceedings, the petitioners moved the court for the dismissal of their petition, and an order was entered dismissing the same “without right to the said petitioners to further prosecute their respective claims.” Afterwards the petitioners moved the court for a modification of the judgment of dismissal so as to expressly show that the right of the. petitioning creditors to sue upon their claims in the state courts is preserved, and that the denial of the right to further prosecute is limited merely to the bankruptcy proceedings. The court granted the motion and, over the objection of this defendant, entered an order to that effect, reciting in the order that the original judgment of dismissal was inadvertently entered and did not conform to the motion upon which it was based. Thereupon the said district court granted to this defendant, as the alleged bankrupt in the bankruptcy proceedings, an appeal to the United States circuit court of appeals, and afterwards this defendant filed in the last-named court his petition for the review' of the order of modification aforesaid.
The above facts were set up by way of supplemental answer in this case, and for the purpose of abating this suit pending the said review' in the United States circuit court of appeals. The supplemental answer also set up as an alleged counterclaim a claim for damages by reason of an attachment which
It is first urged that the court erred in allowing the substitution of respondent without requiring him to plead over, but it is not shown that appellant has suffered thereby. Respondent was merely substituted as the real party in interest, which was proper under our statute. The motion for substitution Avas in the nature of a supplemental pleading, alleging a transfer of interest, and it does not appear that appellant was prevented from controverting that fact if he desired to do so. Respondent adopted the pleading already in the record Avith which appellant had joined in issue, and no injury resulted to the latter.
It is complained that the court required that the trial should proceed, over appellant’s objection, upon oral pleadings by way of demurrer to the counterclaim contained in the supplemental answer, and also by reply to the same answer. The record, hoAvever, shoAvs that the case Avas regularly assigned for trial prior to the giving of notice of the filing of the supplemental answer, and that the motion for leave to file the supplemental answer came on for hearing at the time of the trial. After the filing was alloAved the court stated, in response to an inquiry from respondent’s counsel, that a de
It is next contended that it was error to sustain the demurrer to the counterclaim set up in the supplemental answer. The ruling of the trial court was authorized by the decision of this court in Tacoma Mill Co. v. Perry, 32 Wash. 650, 73 Pac. 801, where it was held that a counterclaim for damages arising out of the wrongful issuance of an attachment cannot be pleaded in answer to a complaint in the original action, although the attachment may have been dissolved prior to the filing of the counterclaim. The reasons therefor are fully discussed in the opinion cited and need not be repeated here.
Appellant insists that the court erred in not giving effect to his plea in abatement. The recital in the first order of dismissal entered by the bankruptcy court was so manifestly an inadvertence that it would seem no modification was really necessary. It cannot be successfully maintained that, on a mere motion by petitioners to dismiss bankruptcy proceedings, the bankruptcy court has the power to enter a judgment that will prevent the petitioners from prosecuting their valid claims against the debtor in the state courts. The plea in abatement therefore seems easily determinable without reference to the appeal which was taken from the order of modification. The court did not err in refusing to sustain the plea in abatement.
We think the judgment is fully sustained by the testimony, and it is affirmed.
Fullerton, Rudkin, Dunbar, Root, Mount, and Crow, JJ., concur.