25 Wis. 661 | Wis. | 1870
The single question is, whether the defendants were required to answer de novo after amendment of the complaint, or were at liberty, if they saw fit, to let their answer to the original complaint stand as their answer to the amended one. The complaint was amended, as of course, under sec. 36, ch. 125, E. S., after the answer was put in, but the matters in issue remained unchanged: Nothing new was set up by the amendment requiring a new or different answer from the one made to the original complaint. The amendment consisted only in changing the ad damnum clause. The amount of damages claimed was increased, but the cause of action was the same in both complaints, and the bill of particulars attached to each, identical. The practice in the English courts is thus7 stated by Mr. Tidd: “ On amending the declaration in the king’s bench, after plea pleaded, the defendant is at liberty to plead de novo, if his case require it, and has two days allowed him for that purpose, after the amendment made and payment of costs. * * * But in
This long-established and reasonable practice of the common law seems equally well suited to the code, wMch contains nothing in conflict with it. In New York we find no decisions made since the adoption of the' code directly involving the question. Those decisions most nearly bearing upon it seem to sanction the common-law practice. Kilts v. Seeder, 10 How. Pr. 270; Union Bank v. Mott, 11 Abb. Pr. 42; S. C., 19 How. Pr. 267. In this state the point has never before been presented. On the whole, we are inclined to adhere to the practice of the English courts of common law as laid down by Mr. Tidd. This we think the safest and the best, and that which must have been intendéd, in the absence of any provision of statute, or rule of court, to the contrary.
It follows from these views that the plaintiff was wrong in taking judgment upon the amended complaint as for want of an answer. The defendants, not having elected to answer over within the time prescribed by law, their answer to the original complaint was an, answer to the amended one; and. the issues thus joined should have been tried as in other cases. The court erred in refusing defendants’ motion to set aside the judgment for irregularity; and the order must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
By the Court.— So ordered.