Citation Numbers: 2 Hill & Den. 387
Judges: Bronson
Filed Date: 1/15/1842
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 1/12/2023
By the Court,
When the defendant pleads puis darrein continuance, the plaintiff may reply or demur, and then the cause must proceed to a final determination. If judg ment is rendered for the plaintiff, he will' recover his debt or demand with costs. If the defendant has judgment, he will re cover costs. But as the action was well founded at the first, he will, perhaps, only be entitled to such costs as have accrued subsequent to the plea. (Littleton v. Cross, 4 Barn. & Cress. 117.) if the plaintiff neither replies nor demurs, he virtually admits that the plea is true, and that the matters stated in it constitute a good bar to the further maintenance of the action. Both parties are agreed that the suit ought not to proceed. The defendant says so by his plea, and the plaintiff admits the allegation by his silence.
Although the defendant may plead any good bar, such as payment or a release, which has arisen after issue joined, it does not follow that he will in all cases be entitled to go on and take judgment by default, and thus compel the plaintiff to pay the costs of the action. When such a plea is received, the plaintiff has the option of submitting or proceeding with the action. (Per Bailey, J. in Littleton v. Cross, 4 Barn, & Cress. 117.) If he proceeds, he does so at the peril of paying costs. If he submits, he is chargeable with no fault, and should incur no penalty.
It often happens that the defendant, being unable to gainsay the justice of the plaintiff’s demand, pays the debt, .or in some other way settles the suit, and both parties agree, either expressly or tacitly, that the action is at an end. To allow the defendant in such a case to plead the payment, and compel the plaintiff to reply or demur, would work the grossest injustice. The effect would be to throw the costs on the plaintiff after the defendant had admitted that the suit was properly brought, and agreed that it should be terminated.
I have thus far been speaking of a case where the plea puis sets up matter which constitutes a good bar to the action. In such a case we think the defendant should not go on to judgment as a matter of course, and without moving the court. But there was still less reason for a judgment in this case. The matter set up in the plea did not constitute a bar to the action, and the plaintiff might have demurred with safety. The defendant did not plead a submission and award,
In regarding this as a proper case for pleading in bar, it is not improbable that both parties may have been misled by the cases of Towns v. Wilcox, (12 Wend. 503,) and Green v. Patcken, (13 id. 293.) In the first case, a submission to arbitration was pleaded, and on demurrer judgment was rendered for the defendant. In the other case, the defendant pleaded an agreement to refer a cause which was not referrible under the statute, and on demurrer judgment was rendered in his favor. But it is evident in both cases, as well from the terms of .the special demurrers, as from the remarks of the learned chief justice, that the attention of the court was only called to the question whether the pleas showed that the suits had been discontinued ; and it was held, in accordance with former decisions, that a submission to arbitration, or an agreement to refer a cause which is not referrible under the statute, amounts to a discontinuance of the suit. These cases must not be considered as having decided any thing more than I have mentioned. Had the point been made that the matter set up by the defendant was not pleadable as a bar, but should have been taken advantage of by motion, it cannot be doubted that judgment would have been given for the plaintiff, instead of the defendant.
Ordered accordingly.
See West v. Stanley, (1 Hill, 69.)
This point was considered by some of the members of the court for the correction of errors in Wells v. Lain, (15 Wend. 99,) though not definitely