Sloss-Sheffield Steed & Iron Co. v. Yancey
Sloss-Sheffield Steed & Iron Co. v. Yancey
Opinion of the Court
On July 25, 1913, the appellee filed a bill against, the appellant to quiet the title to certain lands in Jefferson county. This bill conformed in all respects, it seems, to the directions of the statutes set forth in chapter 127 of the Code of 1907 (section 5443 et seq.) for the constitution of a proper bill in such cases. A trial by jury was demanded. Code, § 5446. On August 23, 1913, the respondent, appellant, filed its answer to the statutory bill, and propounded its claim of absolute title to the land described in the original bill. In reciting in its answer the chain of title upon which reliance was placed the respondent, appellant, referred to a deed conveying the land in question to its predecessor of date December 16, 1895, from William Reid and vHfe. On May 24, 1915, a paper was filed with the register which was addressed and captioned in these words:
“To the Honorable A. H. Sharpe, Judge of said Court:
“Your complainant, with leave of court first" had and obtained, amends his bill of complaint heretofore filed in this cause as follows.* * *”
As appears from dates, this paper was filed about 20 months after the respondent’s answer to the original, statutory bill was filed. Following the caption quoted, the paper contained two paragraphs, numbered 6 and 7, and the prayer to be stated. The sixth paragraph alleged that the complainant was advised and believed, and upon such information and belief averred, that respondent claimed an interest or title to the property in question under and by virtue of the Reid deed, of date December 16, 1895. The seventh paragraph alleged that at the time said Reid and wife executed the deed of December 16, 1895, “they were told by the respondent that said conveyance included only the N. E. % of the S. E. % of section 21, and that the said William Reid and his wife did not read said conveyance, and did not sell or agree to sell” the property described in paragraph 2 of the original bill. The prayer therein was that said deed should be declared null and void in so far as it applied to property described in paragraph 2 of the original bill, and for “such other, further, and different relief as your complainant may be entitled to under the pleading and proof of this cause.” It thus appears that the substance of the matter set forth in the paper filed May 24, 1915, was with a view to averting and avoiding that feature of the answer wherein the respondent set forth the deed of December 16, 1S95, as a link in its chain of asserted title. 16 Cyc. pp. 341, 342. On May 26, 1915, two days after the filing of the paper just referred to, the respondent, through its solicitor, filed demurrer, containing eight grounds, captioned in this language:
“Now comes the respondent, the Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Company, and after the amendment to the bill of complaint in the above cause files the following demurrers. * * * ”
Subsequently, presumably about March 23, 1917, it was “ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that a jury be impaneled to try the proceedings at issue in this cause,” and on March 23, 1917, the jury returned a verdict affirming that:
“The complainant is now, and was at the time of the filing of this bill in this cause, in quiet and peaceful possession of property as described in bill of complaint.”
As of the date March 27, 1917, the minute entry recites:
“This cause, coming on to be heard, was submitted for final decrep upon the verdict rendered by the jury on the 23d day of March, 1917.”
The following “final decree” was filed in office March 27, 1917:
“This matter coming ’ on to be heard and a jury being impaneled, and all of the material allegations of the bill of complaint being proven to-the satisfaction of the jury, and the jury in this cause having rendered a verdict deciding all the issues in favor of the complainant and the court being satisfied from the evidence that the complainant was at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint .in this cause filed, and is now, in the quiet and peaceable possession of the property described in the bill of complaint, and the respondent, although having filed pica [italics supplied], offering no proof, it is by the court ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the complainant, G. W. Yancey, trustee, was at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint, and is now,- in the quiet and 'peaceable possession of the property as described in the bill of conmlaint and hereafter set out, and that the respondent, Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Company, has no estate or interest in or incumbrance upon such lands as described in the bill, to wit, the northwest quarter of southwest quarter of section 22, township 16, range 3, west, situated in Jefferson county, Ala., or any part thereof. It is further adjudged and decreed that the complainant is entitled to his costs in this behalf expended.”
In response to motion by the respondent to amend this decree nunc pro tune by striking out the four words above italicized therein (“although having filed plea”), the court so amended the decree and struck those words therefrom, leaving the decree to affirm, in that particular connection, that “the respondent offering no proof.” It is to be noted there is no recital in the minute entries, as disclosed by this record, that either the respondent or its solicitor was present when the jury was impaneled, when the testimony was taken, when the verdict of the jury was returned, or when the cause was submitted for final decree on March 23, 1917. It is to be further noted that nowhere in the final decree was account taken of any amendment of the original bill. On the contrary, the allusions to initial pleading in the nnal decree appear to be to the original bill, without regard to any amendment of it. It is to be further noted that no decree pro confesso with respect to the matters averred in the paper filed May 24, 1915, was taken.
*202
The appellant insists that error underlies the final decree for that the cause was not at issue at the time of the submission; its contention being necessarily predicated of the view that the original bill had been amended by the paper filed May 24, 1915, to which respondent had seasonably -interposed its demurrer. To this the appellee, complainant, replies, in effect, that since the amendment was not allowed, but was merely proposed, it never became a part of the complainant’s pleading in the cause, and that the decree of the court was alone rested upon the original bill, to which respondent had made, on August 23, 1913, the answer contemplated by the statutes. Code, § 5445. It is quite clear that, if the original bill was in fact amended, the cause was not at issue; no decree pro confesso thereto could have been taken; and the submission was premature and erroneous. It is true that prior to the enactment approved September 22, 1915 (General Acts 1915, pp. 705, 700), a proposed amendment did not become an amendment, a part of the pleading in a cause, until it had been allowed, or, what is the same thing, leave was granted to amend as proposed. Chancery Rules 42, 43; Civil Code, p. 1540; 31 Cyc. pp. 367, 368, 376; Beatty v. Brown, 85 Ala. 209, 4 South. 609; Bondurant v. Sibley, 37 Ala. 565, 570, 571. In the last-cited case this court recognized the effectiveness of a perfected amendment where the parties and the court treated an amendment as having been made, either by long acquiescence pending the -disposition of the cause or by considering and deciding the subject-matter introduced even by an irregular amendment. However, in the third section of the act of 1915, cited above, it is provided that an order allowing an amendment to a bill or answer is not necessary; that all such amendments so filed should relate back to and become a part of the bill or answer amended as fully as though the amendment had been incorporated in the bill or answer when filed. In the view this court takes of the record before us, neither the question of the ratification of an unauthorized amendment nor the question of the acquiescence by the court in a status that could only have come into existence through an effective amendment is necessary to be considered or decided. The question here considered with a view to its decision must turn upon the status of the complainant’s pleading on May 24-26, 1915, more than a year before the cause was submitted.
Code, § 3128, provides:
“If an amendment to the bill is made after answer filed, and answer is required by complainant, an answer and not merely a demurrer or plea must be put in within thirty days after notice thereof, or further time be obtained to answer. And if not so answered, the matter may be taken as confessed. But the same may be set aside on application as in other cases. And if no- answer is required, the defendant may counter plead as he may be advised; but all such pleadings shall only be allowed as amendments to the defensive pleadings already in the cause, and not as originals, and the cause shall be heard as the whole after being once at issue. The defendant may incorporate a plea or demurrer in his answer.”
It is insisted for appellee, as .we understand it, that one effect of this statute is to avert the necessity for a decree pro confesso where the bill is amended before answer filed, and the respondent does not seasonably answer the amendment, but undertakes merely to demur; and this on the ground that the statute forbids a demurrer in such circumstances not incorporated in an answer which must be filed within 30 days after notice of amendment or -within the period of time extended by the court. The substance of the above-quoted section of the Code of 1907 was section 2907 of the Code of 1852, section 3358 of the Code of 1867, section 3792 of the Code of 1876, section 3451 of the Code of 1886, and section 708 of the Code of 1896.
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the end that the litigable rights of the parties may be asserted under the proper form of pleading in such causes.
Reversed and remanded.
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