DocketNumber: No. 28,567.
Judges: Stone
Filed Date: 10/30/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
Plaintiff is an architect and sues for fees under a contract with defendant. The case went to trial before a jury. After introducing the testimony of several witnesses on his own behalf, plaintiff rested. Thereupon defendant asked "the privilege of resting for the purpose of making a motion," which was granted. Defendant then moved "for a dismissal of this action upon the ground and *Page 358 for the reason that the plaintiff has failed to establish a cause of action against the defendant; that there is no material or competent evidence before the court which would justify submitting this case to the jury." After argument the motion was granted. Plaintiff moved for a new trial, assigning as errors the dismissal and certain rulings excluding evidence offered by him. That motion was denied and judgment entered reciting the fact of trial and that defendant had moved that the case "be dismissed on the merits." It concluded thus: "That the above entitled action be and the same is hereby dismissed on the merits."
1. There ought to be no misunderstanding of G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9322, invoked by both parties. It regulates only dismissals in the strict and technical sense, which embrace any termination of an action without a "final determination" on the merits. The statute begins thus: "An action may be dismissed, without a final determination of its merits, in the following cases." There follows an enumeration of five separate and differing occasions when there may be such a dismissal putting an end to the case but not to the cause of action declared upon. Pioneer L. L. Co. v. Bernard,
It is helpful in understanding the dismissals abolished by our statute to remember that, although historically the final determination of an equity case on the merits and adverse to the plaintiff took the form of a dismissal of his bill (3 Wd. Phr. [1 ser.] 2105; Boom v. St. Paul F. M. Co.
It was these inconclusive and sometimes ex parte terminations of actions, without a trial and hence without decision of the merits, which were abolished thereby, save as the statute itself enumerates the occasions and permits the manner in which a dismissal, i. e. a mere nonsuit, may be had.
2. Plaintiff introduced his evidence. He did not ask for a non-suit or leave otherwise to discontinue his action. On the contrary, he submitted his case for decision by resting. He invoked final judicial action thereon. Defendant was under no obligation to introduce evidence. Its privilege likewise was to submit its case to decision on plaintiff's evidence. That was done, and the decision, thus invited by both litigants, was on the merits.
The practice adopted by defendant's counsel is not commendable. They should have proceeded in the conventional way, after resting, to move for a directed verdict. Normandin v. Freidson,
3. Striking the words "on the merits" was without much damage. Even without them, the judgment rested on "a final determination" of the case. But defendant was entitled to have the judgment stand as it was. The order amending it was error. It was a "final order * * * upon a summary application in an action after judgment" and so appealable under G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9498.
Order reversed.