Whiting v. Cook
Whiting v. Cook
Opinion of the Court
The record of judgment shows that each of the plaintiffs in the former suit in which it was rendered had a distinct and separate claim and cause of action; for the provision
But the defendants, foreseeing this result, have moved that they may be permitted, under the authority given to the court for that purpose, to make such amendments as will maintain and secure to them the whole or such part of the judgment recovered by them in the former action as substantial justice requires. Gen. Sts. c. 129, § 42. But the difficulties in allowing such amendment are insuperable. The only amendment which can be made, so as to authorize the rendition of any judgment in the action, is to strike out all the plaintiffs but one. This might have been done in the original action. Dodge v. Wilkinson, 3 Met. 292. But if that were now done, the judgment could not stand, for no one of the whole number of the plaintiffs was or is entitled to recover the whole sum for which judgment was rendered. Nor is there anything in the record to show what part of that sum any one of the plaintiffs would be personally entitled to recover; for, all of them having taken judgment for less than the entire claim with interest upon it from the date of their writ, it is obvious that some one or all of them had, before the rendition of judgment, been partly paid and satisfied ; and the record now affords no means of determining what was justly
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Daniel P. Whiting v. George W. Cook & others
- Status
- Published