Filed Date: 2/21/1919
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/7/2024
— The tendency of the present day pleading and practice is towards simplicity. The vital and indispensable parts of a bill are the stating part and prayer for relief. 10 R. C. L. 411; Comstock v. Herron, 45 Fed. 661.
Rule 18 Circuit Court Equity Actions expressly renders the confederacy clause, the charging part and the jurisdictional clause unimportant to be alleged. The interrogatory part of the bill has become useless because of the practice of waiving sworn answers and the right to obtain evidence from the defendant by making him a witness at a hearing or procuring his depositions.
The bill filed in this case contained in substance a general interrogatory coupled with the prayer for process, which is sufficient to save it from the objection made by appellants, even if the interrogatory part of the bill was important.
Affirmed.
All concur.