Court Opinion

ID: 5171317
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-02 04:55:53.046599+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:06.226831
License: Public Domain

MORGAN, C. J.
The complaint contains six causes of action, stated in separate counts, and it appears therefrom that appellant and five other persons, who were engaged in raising clover for seed, applied to Jacob Forch, a druggist, for sodium arsenite, a suitable poison to be used in compounding a spray for such crops for the purpose of destroying insect pests; that he sold and supplied them with sodium arsenate and carelessly, negligently, falsely and fraudulently represented to them that it was sodium arsenite and they, not knowing the difference between said chemicals, used the same upon their crops and thereby destroyed them.
Appellant sued in the first count for the destruction of his own crop and in the second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth counts as assignee of the several owners of crops therein mentioned. Forch demurred to the complaint on several grounds and the demurrer was sustained on the ground that several causes of action had been improperly united. Appellant declined to further plead and judgment of dismissal was entered from which this appeal was prosecuted. While the appeal was pending Jacob Forch died and appellant moved this court for an order substituting Rosina Forch, executrix of his estate, as respondent herein.
*418Two questions are submitted for our consideration which are so. closely related they will be discussed and disposed of together: 1. Are the claims assignable; 2. Do the causes of action survive?
As a general rule, in the absence of a statute providing otherwise, causes of action ex contractu survive while causes ex delicto do not. However, there are well-recognized exceptions to both branches of the rule. As was said by the supreme court of Virginia in Lee’s Admr. v. Hill, 87 Va. 497, 24 Am. St. 666, 12 S. E. 1052: “The true test is, not so much the form of the action, as the nature of the cause of action. Where the latter is a tort unconnected with contract, and which affects the person only, and not the estate, such as assault, libel, slander, and the like, there the rule, Actio personalis, etc., applies. But where, as in the present case, the action is founded on a contract, it is virtually ex contractu,, although nominally in tort, and there it survives.” (See, also, Booth v. Northrop, 27 Conn. 325; Cutter v. Hamlen, 147 Mass. 471, 18 N. E. 397; 1 L. R. A. 429; State v. Starkweather, 40 N. Y. Supr. 453; Feary v. Hamilton, 140 Ind. 45, 39 N. E. 516; Boor v. Lowrey, 103 Ind. 468, 53 Am. Rep. 519, and note, 3 N. E. 151; Winston v. Gordon, 115 Va. 899, 80 S. E. 756; Williams v. Harris (Tex. Civ. App.), 193 S. W. 403; Vragnizan v. Savings Union Bank & Trust Co., 31 Cal. App. 709, 161 Pac. 507; 1 C. J., p. 174, sec. 303; p. 186, sec. 342.)
We have no statutory provision abrogating the common-law rule of survival of causes of action above referred to. Applying that rule to this case it may be said that while the action is, in form, ex delicto, the cause is, in fact, ex contractu. The injury for which recovery is sought grows out of the contract of purchase of sodium arsenate represented by the vendor to be sodium arsenite, and the application thereof to the crops of appellant and his assignors whereby those specific pieces of property were destroyed. These facts distinguish this case from those where recovery is sought for injury to the person or for torts resulting in damage to the estate, gen*419erally, and make these claims assignable and cause them to survive the death of a party to the action, f The motion to substitute Rosina Forch, executrix, for Jacob Forch as respondent herein is granted.
The remaining question is: Did the judge err in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint Í Counsel for respondent contends that even though the causes of action are assignable, they cannot be united in one complaint because they arise out of separate wrongful acts alleged to have been committed against appellant and his assignors severally. That is not the true test. The right to unite causes of action is statutory in Idaho and is conferred, and limited, by C. L., sec. 4169, as follows:
“The plaintiff may unite several causes of action in the same complaint, where they all arise out of:
“1. Contracts, express or implied.
“2. Claims to recover specific real property, with or without damage for the withholding thereof, or for waste committed thereon, and the rents and profits of the same.
“3. Claims to recover specific personal property, with or without damages for the withholding thereof.
“4. Claims against a trustee by virtue of a contract, or by operation of law.
“5. Injuries to character.
“6. Injuries to person.
“7. Injuries to property: Provided, That where injuries to person and to personal property arise out of the same occurrence or transaction, causes of action may be united in the same complaint, and separate actions for such injuries are hereby prohibited.
“With the exception of the causes of action specified in subdivision 7 last preceding, the causes of action so united must all belong to one only of these classes, and mfist affect all the parties to the action and not require different places of trial, and must be separately stated; but an action for malicious arrest and prosecution, or either of them, may be united *420with an action for either an injury to the character or to the person.”
These causes arise out of injuries to property, affect all parties to the action, do not require different places of trial, are separately stated, and, pursuant to subdivision 7, above quoted, may be united in one complaint. (Kruger v. St. Joe Lumber Co., 11 Ida. 504, 83 Pac. 695.)
The judgment is reversed. Costs are awarded to appellant.
Rice and Budge, JJ., concur.