Southard v. Marlboro Agricultural Co.
Southard v. Marlboro Agricultural Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Appeal from a formal order of the Circuit Court, whereby the plaintiff was allowed, with the defendant’s consent, to discontinue the action. The suit is upon two notes made by the defendant to E. H. Southard, and by him assigned to the plaintiff, E. F. Southard.
*510 There are two exceptions, which ought to be reported.
“And the defendant further alleges upon information and belief—that is, upon the acts and doings of E. H. Southard and E. E. Southard—that the plaintiff, E. F. Southard, and L. H. Southard have conspired and colluded to defraud and cheat the said company out of the said land, and also out of other large amounts of money.”
The answer alleged no “acts and doings” of E. F. Southard, and alleged no facts or circumstances tending to show he had any part in the conduct charged against L. H. Southard. The only facts alleged which touch E. F. Southard are *511 his kinship to E. H. Southard and his ownership of the note. By no sort of reasonable conjecture do these two circumstances join him in the alleged conspiracy to defraud the defendant.
We have not considered the circumstance that the defendant, acting through its alleged president, consented to the order of discontinuance.
The order below is affirmed.
Reference
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
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- Syllabus
- 1. Dismissal and Nonsuit — Voluntary — Before Trial.-—The Court may authorize plaintiff to discontinue a case after the pleadings are completed, and the cause ready for trial. 2. Appeal and Error — Exceptions — Sufficiency.—An exception that permission to dismiss the case was erroneous because the pleadings had been completed and cause ready for trial is too indefinite. 3. Bills and Notes — Defenses — Sufficiency of Pleading.-—In an action by the assignee of a note, defendant’s allegations that plaintiff secured the note after maturity, and that the assignor was his uncle, are insufficient to connect plaintiff with the assignor’s alleged wrongful acts toward defendant. 4. Dismissal and Nonsuit—Voluntary—Discretion or Court.—A trial Court has discretionary power to permit plaintiff to discontinue the cause before trial. 6. Dismissal and Nonsuit—Voluntary—Discretion or Court.—Where defendant’s pleading would not sustain an affirmative judgment against plaintiff, there is nothing to indicate the trial Court did not exercise its discretion in allowing plaintiff to discontinue the case before trial.