Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Aldridge
Opinion of the Court
This is a writ of error sued out by plaintiff in error from the judgment rendered against it in the United States District Court for the Southern Division of the Northern Dis
“That the court would enter on the docket that any matter of defense may be given without reference to the pleading; that the record would show an agreement that any legal matter be introduced without reference to pleas.”
The defendant then excepted to such ruling and objected to proceeding with the trial under such circumstances, which objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted to such ruling.
The plaintiff in error has assigned some 34 grounds of error, some of them with subheads,' but we shall only discuss the sixth and seventh grounds of error assigned, as in the judgment of a majority of this court these errors necessitate a reversal and remanding of this cause for a new trial.
The sixth assignment of error is the court erred in declining to receive or entertain defendant’s several special pleas. The seventh error is the court erred in requiring defendant to proceed with the trial without pleas specially setting forth the defenses relied upon. There is no doubt that under the decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama, the parties to a suit may by consent plead in short,, and if the court approves, proceed to trial under the issues thereby made, and it is also well established that by such proceeding the parties thereto estop themselves from complaining of such proceeding, and the defendant will not thereafter be heard to complain that his right to plead the general issue and special pleas guaranteed him under the laws of Alabama (Code Ala. 1907, § 5331) has been denied.
Pleading in short is commonly used in Alabama, and in Abercrombie v. Mosely, 9 Port. (Ala.) 145, Justice Goldthwaite said:
“It is to be regretted that this laxity of pleading was ever countenanced by the court, but it has prevailed too long, and been sanctioned by too many decisions, to be now overturned. If the parties to a cause will consent to this course of pleading, perhaps no very evil consequences will flow from it.”
“This is not a proper method of pleading, in the absence of statute, unless adopted by consent.” Ency. of Pleading and Practice, 560.
“There was no consent on the part of the plaintiff to receive the plea as it was pleaded, and it was clearly erroneous to hold it good.” Shields v. Byrd, 15 Ala. 822.
.Thus we see that, in the absence of statutory authority for such pleas, consent of the parties is a necessary ingredient, and there is no statutory authority for the same in Alabama. As far back as Abercrombie v. Mosely, Justice Goldthwaite, supra, deplored the reception of such pleas even by' consent. Again, Justice Dargan, in Strange v. Powell, 15 Ala. 456, says:
“We know that the practice has prevailed in the Circuit Court of pleading the usual pleas merely by stating their name, and when no objection is made to the pleas thus pleaded, we will not permit the objection to be first raised in this court. * * * But when objections were made to such pleas in the court below and are not waived here, we cannot consider them as pleas, nor pronounce that the court erred in striking them out, even if they would have constituted a bar if pleaded in due form.”
It was well said by Chief Justice Waite, in Hill v. Mendenhall, 21 Wall. 455, 22 L. Ed. 616:
“The office of pleading is to inform the court and the parties of the facts in issue; the court that it may declare the law, and the parties that they may know what to meet by their proof.”
See, also, McFaul v. Ramsey, 20 How. 524, 15 L. Ed. 1010, where Mr. Justice Grier says:
“Hence it is necessary that the parties should frame the allegations which they respectively make in support of their demand or defense into certain writings called pleadings.”
It would seem on principle that the defendant has the right, before he is forced to an introduction of his testimony, to know which of the issues he has tendered, if supported, will bar the recovery, and to have those issues, when definitely made, disclosed by the record, so that the action of the court in eliminating any of them may properly be presented for review. Unless the record shows this, the appellate court 'cannot and will not review the action of the trial court. As said by Justice McClellan in Blair v. Williams, 159 Ala. 659, 49 South. 72, “In this court a complainant must show error on the record,” and although in that case the parties by consent pleaded in short and with leave to offer in evidence any facts that could be specially pleaded, the Supreme Court affirmed the judgment because the record did not
Section 5331, Code Ala. 1907, provides:
“The defendant may plead more pleas tlian one without unnecessary repetition ; and, if he does not rely solely on a denial of the plaintiff’s cause of action, must plead specially the matter of defense.” «
In the instant case the defendant tendered the general issue and some 14 special pleas, setting up contributory negligence, and assumption of risk, to meet different phases of the testimony as it might be produced. Each and every of the pleas were stricken down by the court against the objection of the defendant, and the court against such objection undertook to frame such issue for the defendant, not by requiring an amendment when the particular plea was an insufficient statement of fact or redundant, nor by striking any pleas that were unnecessary repetitions, but by making a docket entry that any matter of defense may be given without reference to the pleading. Clearly this was an invasion of the right secured to it by section 5331 of the Alabama Code, above quoted, and when done, not with the consent of the defendant, but against its objection, is reversible error, unless it affirmatively appears from the record that it is error without injury.
The defendant in error claims that the judgment should be affirmed because, if error was committed, it was error without injury, and refers to Garner et al. v. Morris, 65 South. 1002, to support his contention. We have examined that case, as well as Taylor et al. v. Corley et al., 113 Ala. 580, 21 South. 404. These cases are not alone in deciding the questions therein decided. There are many decisions from the many states and many cases in the United States courts which have decided that error committed by the trial court will not support a reversal when such error has not resulted in injury to the appellant or plaintiff in error. An examination of Garner v. Morris will show the quotation relied upon is obiter dicta.
In this case, after a careful review of the record herein, we are not able to say that it affirmatively appears that no injury was done plaintiff in error by the action of the court in striking its pleas and forcing it to trial with no issue of fact made. It would, we think, be impossible for the jury, in the mass of testimony introduced, to bear in mind and apply to the different issues outlined in the charge of the court, covering some 18 pages of the record, the salient facts bearing on those issues as defined in the charge, and which were not the issues as proposed by defendant.
“Tile court erred in overruling the demurrer. The error of the court in sustaining the plea entered of course into the trial and instruction to the jury.”
For the errors pointed out the case will be reversed and remanded for a new trial, the costs to be taxed against the defendant in error.
It is' so ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. v. ALDRIDGE
- Status
- Published