Summary
In Rowland the court held that it was an abuse of trial court discretion to allow a plea of abatement to be heard regarding a defect affecting the capacity to sue raised after the plaintiff could no longer cure the defect.
Summary of this case from Denlinger v. HutchinsonOpinion
Argued April 15, 1926
Affirmed May 25, 1926
From Marion: GEORGE G. BINGHAM, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
For appellant there was a brief over the names of Mr. H.B.M. Miller and Messrs. McNary, McNary Keyes, with an oral argument by Mr. Walter E. Keyes.
For respondents there was a brief over the name of Messrs. Smith Shields, with oral arguments by Mr. Guy O. Smith and Mr. W.C. Winslow.
See 1 R.C.L. 52; 20 R.C.L. 922. See 21 R.C.L. 539.
This is an action by James A. Rowland and Irena V. Rowland, styling themselves partners doing business as J.A. Rowland Company, plaintiffs and respondents, against the National Reserve Insurance Company, a corporation, as defendant and appellant, to recover the amount of their loss under a fire insurance policy issued by the defendant. The policy contained a condition as follows:
"No suit or action on this policy for the recovery of any claim shall be sustainable in any court of law or equity — unless commenced within 12 months next after the fire."
The fire occurred January 29, 1922. Within the year next after that date this action was instituted to recover the amount named in the policy. There was an answer denying everything in the complaint and affirmatively charging that the plaintiffs had been guilty of false swearing in their proof of loss in that they had overvalued the property which was destroyed. Issue was joined on the new matter in the answer. The cause came on to be heard for trial at the October term of the Circuit Court for Marion County for 1923, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. This, however, was set aside and a new trial granted, and the cause came on for hearing on January 16, 1924, without any change having been made in the pleadings. When the case was called for trial, the defendant asked and obtained leave, over the objection and exception of the plaintiffs, to file an amended answer, setting up a plea in abatement, in substance that the plaintiff had not filed in the office of the County Clerk the certificate of an assumed name required to be filed under the provisions of Chapter 154 of the General Laws of Oregon for 1913, and that they "did not comply in any respect with the provisions of said laws, until the 9th day of January, 1924, more than one year after the fire in their said amended complaint alleged." Based on the same facts, the defendant urged in their amended answer that the action was not commenced within one year next after the happening of the fire on the ground that under the statute hereinafter referred to they were forbidden to maintain the action without having filed the certificate. The court denied the plea, after trial, but the plaintiffs excepted to the filing of the amended answer at all, and the trial on the merits resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendant has appealed.
1, 2. The sole question urged on this appeal is that about the plaintiffs being disqualified to sue because their certificate had not been filed. Under the record, as disclosed by the bill of exceptions, the action was commenced within the year next after the fire. No plea in abatement was offered for filing until long after the expiration of that year nor until the beginning of the second trial of the action. It is taught in Uhlmann v. Kin Daw, 97 Or. 681 ( 193 P. 435):
"* * that our statute merely disqualified the parties from suing, and that the defect is waived by failure to answer, or to demur in case the defect appeared upon the face of the pleadings": Citing Beamish v. Noon, 76 Or. 415 ( 149 P. 522); Shucking v. Young, 78 Or. 483 ( 153 P. 803); Benson v. Johnson, 85 Or. 677 ( 165 P. 1001, 167 P. 1014); Columbia River Door Co. v. Todd, 90 Or. 147 ( 175 P. 443, 860).
Not having, in the first instance, pleaded the lack of filing a certificate of an assumed name, the defendant waived that defect. Moreover, it waited and omitted to urge that defense until after the limitation of time sipulated in the policy had expired. In our judgment the Circuit Court abused its discretion in permitting the answer to be amended so as to set up the plea in abatement and incidentally the conventional agreement about the limitation of time in which the action should be brought. The reason is that the defendant allowed the matter to run and so in effect lulled the plaintiffs into a sense of security, until it was too late for them to file the necessary certificate. It is not right to allow the defendant to take back its waiver of the plea in abatement when and not until the plaintiffs could not be restored to their former standing.
Pleas in abatement are not favored in law and the procedure respecting them should be strictly construed. With this view of the matter the amended answer should be disregarded and the judgment of the Circuit Court affirmed the same as if the amended answer had not been filed.
Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
RAND, J., being absent, did not participate in this decision.
McBRIDE, C.J., and COSHOW, JJ., concur.