Judges: Torrance, Baldwin, Hamersley, Hall, Prentice
Filed Date: 4/30/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The plaintiffs' complaint is in the form known in the Practice Book as "the common counts." The bill of particulars is against the husband alone, for provisions bought by him to the amount of $197.91. The defendants *Page 606 filed a joint answer. This admitted "so much of the allegations of plaintiffs' complaint and bill of particulars that allege $84.86," and denied the rest; and then set up a tender before suit, by "the defendant," of $84.86, and that "the defendant" has been ever willing to pay that sum; and that payments were made by "the defendants," from time to time, "on account of such goods as are alleged in the bill of particulars, amounting in all to $113.05." The plaintiffs replied, admitting the tender and making no reference to the alleged payments on account.
These pleadings constitute no foundation for the judgment rendered. A bill of particulars filed under "the common counts" controls them. Zacarino v. Pallotti,
The appellant has never objected to the rendition of a judgment against her. She finds fault only with the amount. She joined with her husband in stating to the trial court, as a claim of law, that "the plaintiffs could only recover judgment for $84.86, the amount tendered," and it is one of her reasons of appeal that the court erred in rendering judgment against her for more than that sum, and for costs. In view of this, were there nothing else in the case leading to a different result, she could not be heard to complain of the judgment except so far as it exceeds the amount tendered and charges her with costs. *Page 607
It is not protected from her attack in these respects by the statement in the finding, that at no time during the trial of the cause was any claim presented that the defendants were not jointly and severally liable for whatever was due to the plaintiffs, and that the only question submitted to the court was whether the amount due was $84.86, or the full amount charged in the bill of particulars. Mrs. White had not the burden of proving that she was not liable to the plaintiffs' demand. It was for them to prove that she was liable. Courts are to decide causes in view not simply of the claims presented by counsel, but of the issues presented by the pleadings. The City Court had before it a process against husband and wife, but a declaration against the husband alone. Such a declaration could not support a judgment against both, except by the consent of both.
The judgment appealed from is a joint judgment against husband and wife in an action ex contractu. One only has appealed, but both joined in the notice of appeal. The appellees have raised no question on the ground of the husband's absence, and the appeal has been argued on its merits only. If they had any cause of exception, it must therefore be deemed to have been waived. Masterson v. Herndon, 10 Wall. 416; Lenow v. Lenow, 8 Gratt. (Va.) 349.
As such a judgment is an entirety, had all parties to it been formally brought before the court and the reasons of appeal been such as to dispute its validity altogether, the appeal could only have been disposed of by a total affirmance or reversal. Gaylord v. Payne,
That the husband was not so made a party does not vary this rule. After the filing of the notice of appeal, he had the right to be heard in this court as to all the questions brought up for review. Brockett v. Fair Haven W. R. Co.,
Nor is the force of the rule escaped because the wife, in her reasons of appeal, attacked only the excess of the judgment against her above $84.86. Her attack is successful because the entire judgment against her goes outside of the issue. This defect was one apparent on the record. She had the right to argue from it that her ground of appeal was well taken. She could not limit its effect, as respects her husband's rights, and in his absence, by disclaiming any desire to set aside the entire judgment.
There is error, and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.