1. The joining as defendant of a real-estate agent, as to whom there is no charge of the commission of any unlawful act against the plaintiff irreparable in damages, and against whom only incidental relief is sought, in an equitable action against his non-resident principal, who is the only defendant against whom substantial equitable relief is sought, will not afford jurisdiction in the county of the residence of the agent. This ruling is elaborated in the opinion.
2. In an attempted equitable proceeding, by a subtenant against a nonresident owner of premises, in which the subtenant seeks to retain possession of the property and seeks to enjoin interference with the plaintiff's possession and occupancy, and in which the plaintiff ineffectually seeks to establish jurisdiction in the court by joining the resident renting agent of the owner, jurisdiction will not be established or preserved by an amendment to the petition seeking to oust the plaintiff's tenant, a second subtenant, since any question as to the plaintiff's right to evict such second subtenant is legal and not equitable. Accordingly, such amendment was properly stricken on written motion or demurrer.
3. "Where plaintiff, without first having obtained the sanction of the court, merely files an amendment to his petition in the office of the clerk, which, upon the hearing of the case, the court refuses to allow, the paper does not become a part of the record by merely filing it in the office of the clerk; and if exception is taken to the refusal to allow it, the proposed amendment should be brought up in the bill of exceptions or attached thereto as an exhibit, properly identified, and cannot be brought up by specifying it as a part of the record of which it never legitimately became a part." Simmons v. Freeman,
In Martin v. Gaissert,
The court did not err in dismissing the petition, or in disallowing the second proffered amendment after such dismissal.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
