Kupukaa v. Gray
Kupukaa v. Gray
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OP THE COURT BY
The plaintiff-appellee filed her declaration in assumpsit in the circuit court of the first circuit of the Territory against Charles H. Gray, administrator of the estate of George Malin, alias George Maliu, alias George Maliu Kanaeholo, deceased, defendant, and Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, garnishee. The first count in said declaration is in substance as follows: That the defendant is the administrator of the estate of said George Maliu Kanaeholo, deceased; that on or about the month of May, 1915, the plaintiff at the request of said George Malin agreed to become his housekeeper and as-such did all of his cooking, washing and housework, in consideration of which the said George Malin agreed to malee suitable provision for plaintiff as hereinafter set forth; that plaintiff continued to perform said services up to and including the 25th day of June, 1918, when the said George Malin died; that in the month of October, 1915, the said George Malin took out a policy of insurance on his life in the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, whereby in consideration of the premium of $21.44 then paid to said society by the said George Malin, and of the semi-annual premiums of $21.44 thereafter to be paid, the said society agreed to pay to the heirs, executors, administrators or assigns of the said George Malin, on his death, the sum of $1000; that at or about the time the said George Malin took out the said policy he declared to plaintiff and others that he took out the policy to make provision for plaintiff for performing her services as his housekeeper and that the policy was hers; that thereupon the said “George Malin for valuable consideration orally assigned the said policy and all moneys to become due and
Numerous amendments to the declaration were offered by the plaintiff-appellee and allowed by the court apparently upon the theory of conforming the pleading to the proof. These various rulings were duly excepted to by the defendant-appellant and are embodied and set forth in his bill of exceptions and consisted in striking out the words “as administrator of the estate of George Malin, deceased,” Avhere the same occur, and discontinuing as to the “Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, Garnishee,” leaving the action against Charles H. Gray in his individual capacity. We do not deem it essential to review each of these exceptions specifically as a dissertation thereupon can serve no useful purpose.
At the close of the evidence, the action being tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, the plaintiff-appellee moved the court to allow an amendment changing the cause of action from assumpsit to trover, Avhich was by the court allowed and exceptions preserved by the defendant-appellant and embodied in his bill. of exceptions as numbers 7 and 8.
In conformity to this amendment the declaration contained solely the common law count of trover, founded on the same fiction that the defendant found the goods in question, namely, the policy of insurance, being the property of plaintiff.
“It was a general rule of the common laAV that counts ex contractu and counts ex delicto could not be joined and it is still held even in some of the code States that an at*193 tempt to change the nature of the action from one in tort to one in contract, or vice versa, is properly not an amendment hut a substitution of a cause of action different in nature and substance from that originally stated.” 1 Enc. PI. & Pr. 567. Nor do the statutes of this Territory extend or enlarge this rule. Section 2371 R. L. 1915 provides that “Whenever a plaintiff in an action shall have mistaken the form of action suited to his claim, the court or judge, on motion, shall permit amendments to be made on such terms as it or he shall adjudge reasonable; and the court or judge may, in furtherance of justice and on the like terms, at the trial or on appeal, or at any other stage, before or after judgment, allow any petition or pleading or process or proceeding to be amended by adding or striking out the name of any party, or by correcting a mistake in the name of a party or a mistake in any other respect, or by inserting other allegations material to the case, .or, when the amendment does not substantially change the claim or defense, by conforming the pleadings or the proceeding to the facts proved.”
This amendment permitted by the court for the purpose of allowing the pleadings to conform to the proof was not simply a change in the form of the action, but was a radical change in its substance and was in effect the substitution of an entirely different action from the one at issue and “substantially changed” both “the claim and defense,” bringing it clearly within the prohibition of this section (2371). In the case of Kaco v. Campbell, 20 Haw. 423, this court held that under this section an amendment to a bill in equity to conform the pleadings to the facts proved Avill not be allowed when its effect Avould be to substantially change the petitioner’s claim.
These exceptions numbered 7 and 8 are sustained.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MAGGIE KUPUKAA v. C. H. GRAY
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Pleading and Practice — amendments. An attempt to change the nature of the action from one in contract to one in tort or vice versa is properly not an amendment but a substitution of a cause of action different in nature and substance from that originally stated and is unauthorized hy the laws of this Territory.