Summary
In Smith v. Smith, 123 N.C. 229, a case in principle somewhat like this, at p. 234, the Court, after questioning the justice of permitting the statute of limitations to be pleaded at that stage of the case, says: "The court allowed the motion of defendant for leave to amend the answer and plead the statute of limitations, and defendant filed his plea accordingly.
Summary of this case from Davis v. DavisOpinion
(Decided 15 November, 1898.)
Amendment of Pleadings — Statute of Limitations — Mortgage.
1. The rule seems to be well settled that amendments to pleadings are left to the discretion of the presiding judge — there are some exceptions.
2. Amounts received from the debtor by the owner of a note and mortgage are by force of law applied as payments upon the mortgage.
3. Where the mortgage has been overpaid and the mortgagor sues to recover the overpayment, and the mortgagee pleads the statute of limitations, the defense is applicable only to the excess of payments over the mortgage debt.
CIVIL ACTION for an injunction to enjoin the sale of land under mortgage, and for an account, tried before McIver, J., at November Term, 1897, of CUMBERLAND Superior Court. Appeal by plaintiff.
(230) STATEMENT OF THE CASE.
The plea of the statute of limitations was set up by the defendant in this action, and the court adjudged that the plaintiff's action was barred, and the plaintiff appealed.
The summons was issued on 8 February, 1896.
The plaintiff alleged in the complaint that on 8 April, 1884, he executed to defendant a promissory note for $150, payable 1 December, 1884, with interest, the consideration being a horse, to enable plaintiff to cultivate land which he had rented from defendant on the west side of the Cape Fear River, rent being 800 pounds lint cotton, and also another tract on the east side of the river for $75 money rent, etc. Defendant denied the allegations of the complaint.
In the course of the action a reference was had to state an account between the parties in which the referee finds a balance due the plaintiff of $293.65. The date of the last item of the account is 1 October, 1895, being a credit of a cash payment on note.
Much evidence was introduced before the referee.
The judgment of the court was: It is adjudged that the plaintiff's cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations, and that the defendant's exceptions to report and account filed are allowed, and that the plaintiff's application for an injunction to restrain defendant from selling the land to collect the debt, referred to in the pleadings as per note and mortgage dated 31 December, 1884, is disallowed, and commissioners were appointed to make the sale of the land, etc.
The plaintiff excepted to the judgment:
1. Because the statute was allowed to be pleaded after the reference was ordered, the evidence taken, the report made, and exceptions thereto filed by defendant "and a trial by jury waived." (231)
2. The plea of the statute was not applicable to the course of dealings between the parties as disclosed in the evidence, the relation of principal and agent being shown, and a running account between the parties.
3. The statute of limitation is not applicable so as to exclude evidence of payments on the note.
4. The finding of the court upon the effect of the statute upon the plaintiff's cause of action is erroneous and without evidence to support it. The cause of action was the wrongful act of defendant in exposing plaintiff's land to sale under a mortgage which was itself more than ten years old, and which, according to the evidence reported and the findings of the referee, was overpaid.
5. Because the effect of the plea sustained by the court could only exclude the liability of the defendant in respect to the excess found in favor of the plaintiff over the satisfaction of the note and mortgage.
The defendant's exceptions to the account and statement of the referee, which were allowed by the court, are as follows:
1. That defendant is charged with 1,900 pounds of cotton at 9 3/4 cents and with ten dollars cash in 1884 — $195.25.
2. That defendant is charged with 2,000 pounds of cotton at 9 5/8 cents and 63 bushels of seed cotton at 8 cents in 1885 — $197.54.
3. That defendant is charged with 1,740 pounds of cotton at 8 3/4 cents and 76 bushels seed cotton at 8 cents in 1886 — $158.33.
4. That the defendant is charged with 2,433 pounds of cotton at 9 1/2 cents and 80 bushels seed cotton at 10 cents in 1887 — $239.13.
5. That defendant is charged with 1,740 pounds of cotton at (232) 9 3/4 cents and cash $35, in 1888, making $204.35.
6. That defendant is charged with cash $10, 17 February, 1889.
7. That defendant is charged with cash $23, 1 October, 1895. That the testimony does not support the above-mentioned items of charge.
8. That the referee failed to find as a fact that plaintiff at the end of each and every year had a settlement with defendant as to all matters connected with the rent of land and advances, and that nothing was due the plaintiff on those matters.
9. That the referee failed to find as a fact that defendant owed plaintiff nothing, and that plaintiff owed defendant the amount of the note secured by the mortgage referred to in the pleadings.
10. That the finding of fact as to plaintiff's indebtedness to defendant should have been $159 and interest from 31 December, 1884, as per note set out in the mortgage, $150 and interest from 8 April, 1894, as found by the referee.
Defendant insists upon his right to a jury trial upon said exceptions as above set out, and upon all issues raised by the pleadings and upon all the several exceptions made by him as to the reception and exclusion of testimony.
R. P. Buxton and N. A. Sinclair for plaintiff ( appellant).
N.W. Ray for defendant.
At the term of the court to which the referee made his report the defendant was allowed to file, as an amendment to his answer, the plea of the statute of limitations. The rule seems to (233) be well settled by the decisions of this Court that amendments to pleadings are left to the discretion of the presiding judge. In Gilchrist v. Kitchin, 86 N.C. 20, on that point, the Court said: "But independent of The Code, we hold that the right to amend the pleadings of a cause and allow answers and other pleadings to be filed at any time is an inherent power of the Superior Courts which they may exercise at their discretion unless prohibited by some statutory enactment, or unless vested rights are interfered with." There are some exceptions, as where an amendment should be desired to make a pleading conform to facts proved, it should not be allowed if it changes the claim or defense; or if an amendment is allowed in favor of one party to the suit and a corresponding amendment is rendered thereby necessary on the part of the adverse party a refusal to allow the latter would be appealable. Knott v. Taylor, 96 N.C. 553; Brooks v. Brooks, 90 N.C. 142. In the case before us, however, the rule prevails and the matter was therefore in the discretion of the court. A hardship seems to have been put upon the plaintiff in the allowing of the amendment, but as the matter was in the discretion of his Honor, we cannot review it. The complaint alleged that the defendant owed the plaintiff a balance for each of several years; more than three years, however, having elapsed since the date of the last item in the account. The answer was a simple denial of the indebtedness. Upon the motion of the plaintiff an order of reference was made to have an account stated between the parties. This was a consent order, no objection having been made by the defendant. After the account was stated and reported by the referee, the defendant finding that it was against him, was allowed to put in the plea of the statute of limitations. The defendant knew that he had this plea as well before the (234) reference as afterwards. It looked like trifling with the court to go to trial on the merits of his case and, after being defeated, to make, by way of amendment, a defense of the statute of limitations, which he knew he could avail himself of at the start. But, as we have said, the matter is not an open question. That part of the judgment which concerned the plea of the statute was in this language: "The court allowed the motion of defendant for leave to amend the answer and plead the statute of limitations, and defendant filed his plea accordingly. And thereupon the court doth adjudge that the plaintiff's cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations." The judgment further declared "that the defendant's exceptions to the report and account filed are allowed, . . . and the plaintiff's application for an injunction to restrain the defendant from selling the land to collect the debt referred to in the pleadings as per note and mortgage, is disallowed." The last was clearly only the conclusion of the court as to the legal effect of the statute of limitations upon the indebtedness of the defendant to the plaintiff as set out in the complaint; for it was made without any finding of facts by his Honor. When the judge finds no facts it is presumed that he adopted those found by the referee. McEwen v. Loucheim, 115 N.C. 348; Bancroft v. Roberts, 91 N.C. 363. But it is apparent that he did not adopt the findings of the referee, for the referee found them all in favor of the plaintiff and the judgment is against the plaintiff. In order that the defendant's exceptions to the report of the referee should have been sustained it was necessary for the court to have reviewed and set aside the facts found by the referee and to have found the facts himself in favor of the defendants. This he did not do. As, (235) therefore, there was no finding of facts by his Honor, and the findings of the referee were not approved, there is error in that part of the judgment which sustains the defendant's exceptions and denies the application for the injunction. There is partial error in the judgment concerning the plea of the statute of limitations. The plea of the statute was available only as to whatever amount was found to be due by the defendant to the plaintiff in excess of the amount which the plaintiff owed the defendant for the horse, the consideration of the note and mortgage. If it should be found that the defendant owes to the plaintiff any amount, that amount by force of the law is a payment on the debt due by the plaintiff to the defendant on note and mortgage; and if the defendant's indebtedness should exceed the amount due by the plaintiff for the horse, then the plea of the statute will apply to the excess. There was error, and the case is remanded to the end that the report and the exceptions thereto filed by the defendant may be heard and the law in reference to the statute of limitations be applied as herein declared.
Error.
Cited: Balk v. Harris, 130 N.C. 383; Ramsey v. Browder, 136 N.C. 253.
(236)