Laskey v. Burrill
Laskey v. Burrill
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Corporation Court of the city of Newport News, refusing leave to the complainant, the appellant here, to file an amended and supplemental hill and striking the case from the docket.
The principal object of the suit, which was brought to the first March rules, 1903, was to have a settlement of the accounts between the complainant and defendants, growing out of an alleged partnership between them, to ascertain the balance due the complainant, and to have a decree therefor. In order to make the relief sought effective, the bill, which was sworn to, prayed for an ancillary attachment, an injimction, and the appointment of a receiver.
The bill was answered by Burrill, one of the defendants, at the next rules after it was filed, denying its material allegations.
It appearing from affidavits filed that there would be much conflict in the evidence to be taken to sustain the respective contentions of the complainant and the defendant, Burrill, who had become the owner of the interests of his two co-defendants, the other members of the alleged partnership, issues out of chancery were directed at the July term of the court, to be tried upon the common law side thereof.
At the November term of the court (1904) the complainant tendered an amended bill, and prayed the court that he be allowed to file the same, which amended the original bill by omitting paragraphs three and four of that bill, and inserting in lieu thereof the allegations of the amended bill. The amended bill was not sworn to. At the January term (1905), the court ¡having taken time to consider, refused to allow that amended bill to be filed, but gave leave to the complainant, until the first day of the next term of the court, to offer another amended bill.
The cause was brought on to -be heard upon the motion of the complainant to file his amended and supplemental bill, the •defendant’s objection thereto, the papers formerly read and proceedings formerly had; and “the court being of opinion that the said amended and supplemental bill now tendered should not be filed herein, doth refuse to allow the same to be filed and doth reject the same; and the court being satisfied of the correctness ■of the judgment of the common law court certified to the ehan■cery side hereof, it is adjudged, ordered and decreed that this ■cause be now dismissed and stricken from the docket of the court at the costs of the complainant.” From that decree this .appeal was taken.
The appellees insist that the appellant is not entitled to have this court consider his appeal, because he has failed in his petition for appeal to assign errors in the specific and definite manner required by section 3464 of the Code, as is necessary under the decisions of this court construing that statute.
The appellant, after giving a history of the proceedings in the cause, the substance of the allegations in the original bill and of the amended bills, and of the evidence which was excluded because of the supposed variance, says: “Tour peti
While the assignment of error relied on here is not as specific-as it might have been it is clear that it is to the refusal of the-trial court to permit the amended and supplemental bill to be-filed, and is sufficient.
It may well he doubted whether there was any such variance-. between the allegations of the original bill and the evidence-offered to sustain them as justified the court in excluding the evidence. "Whether the statement, which was the basis of the-settlement or calculation made when the $2,305 was paid, was-on a separate paper, as the allegations of the original bill would seem to indicate it was, or was in one of the books of the partnership, as the amended and supplemental bill alleged, was not very material. The inquiry was whether or not the complainant had been induced to accept the $2,305 in full of his interest in the partnership profits or assets by reason of rejiresentations made by the defendant, Burrill, that the statement or account upon which they based their settlement or calculations was correct, when he knew it was not. Sexton v. Sexton, 9 Gratt. 204, 215.
But conceding that there w7as a veriance, was it not a proper-case for permitting an amendment of the bill?
The time when, and circumstances under which, amended bills may be filed was recently considered by this court in the-case of Kinney v. Craig, 103 Va. 158, where numerous authorities are cited. Under the rules of practice, as stated in that case, and the cases cited, it is clear that the Corporation Court erred in refusing to permit the amended and supplemental bill offered in this ease to he filed, unless the fact that the original bill was sworn to justified its action.
If the allegations of the amended bill are true, the complainant clearly has the right to have a settlement of the partnership accounts, and to refuse him an opportunity to make good those allegations by proof, under the circumstances disclosed by the record, would, as it seems to us, result in a denial of justice by sacrificing substance to form.
We are of opinion, therefore, to reverse the decree complained of, and to remand the cause to the Corporation Court, with direction to permit the complainant’s amended and supplemental bill to be filed, if promptly tendered, and for such further proceedings as may be necessary to a final decree.
Reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.