Court Opinion

ID: 7131881
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:19:43.096591+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:30.044621
License: Public Domain

JUDGE LEWIS
DELIVERED THS OPINION OP THE COURT.
January 23, 1883, the administratrix of H. Heck-man, deceased, instituted an action to recover damages for the destruction of his life in December, 1882, alleged to have been caused by the willful neglect of the servants of the defendant named in the caption of the petition, “Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington *634Railway Company.” The summons on the petition was directed against the same defendant, and the return made thereon by the sheriff of Jefferson county •was as follows: “Executed on Louisville, Cincinnati .and Lexington Railroad Company, January 24, 1883, iby delivering a true copy of the within to M. EL •Smith, Yice-President, he being chief officer in this ■county.” March 3, 1883, an answer having the same •caption, and signed by Barnett, Noble & Barnett, was filed, which contained simply a traverse by “the defendant” of the allegations of the petition, and appended to the answer was a verification in the usual form, signed A. M. Quarrier, who stated therein he was assistant to the president, and assistant secretary" of the defendant, and that the president and vice-president were then absent from this State, and that the .secretary was too ill to attend to business. In June, 1883, the administratrix having died, an order of revivor was made in the name of the present plaintiff, :and appellant, as administrator de bonis non of the •estate of the decedent,
All the motions made by the plaintiff were directed .■against Louisville, Cincinnati and. Lexington Railway ■Company, and the caption of all orders made and entered on record was the same as of the petition until ■January 21, 1884, when the plaintiff moved to file an amended petition, which was filed February 7, 1884.
In that amended petition the plaintiff stated that, by mistake, the defendant was styled in the caption of the petition the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway Company, when it should, and was intended to be, the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, *635which is the correct- name of the defendant sued and intended to be sued in the action, and prayed that the defendant be required to defend by its correct name of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, and for judgment against it as prayed for in the original petition.
May 31, 1884, an order was made dismissing the action as to the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway Company, and June 21, 1884, the Louisville .and Nashville Railroad Company filed an answer to the amended petition, pleading and relying upon limitation in bar of the action against it; and the sufficiency of that ground of defense presents the only •question before us on this appeal.
As more than one year elapsed from December, 1882, when, it is alleged plaintiff’s intestate was killed, to February, 1884, when the amended petition was filed, the simple inquiry is, whether that amendment made .-an entirely new action .against the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company.
Though a party against whom a cause of action exists may be sued therefor by the wrong name, yet if the summons be actually served upon him, and he .appears and files an answer, it seems to us he is as effectually before the court, as much a party to the action, and concluded by a judgment rendered against him, as if his name had been inserted in the caption ■of the petition and in the summons issued by the clerk. Such was the rule under the former system of pleading. For, as said by this court in L. & N. R. Co. v. Hall, 12 Bush, 131, relying upon the authority of •Chitty’s Pleadings, “at common law, when the defend*636ant was sued by the wrong name, he might plead that; fact in abatement, but to make his plea good, he was bound to give the plaintiff a better writ in the future-by disclosing his true name ; ” and as held in the case cited, the same rule may be applied under our Civil Code. Moreover, section 134 expressly authorizes a. petition to be amended at any stage of the action, by correcting a mistake in the name of a party. In Sherman v. The Proprietors of Connecticut River Bridge, 11 Mass., 337, the plaintiff brought an action against, the defendant by the name of “The Proprietors of a Bridge over Connecticut river, between Montague and. Greenfield, late in the county of Hampshire and now in the county of Franklin;” and afterwards, the> plaintiff was permitted to amend his writ by altering the name of the defendants to that of ‘ ‘ The Proprietors of Connecticut River Bridge.”
It appears that certain persons were incorporated; by the name mentioned in the writ; but that company having forfeited its charter, a new and distinct one, was created, having the name of “The Proprietors of Connecticut River Bridge.” Said the court in that case: “The first corporation was dead, and the new one was created for the same purpose and object. The writ was served on the clerk of the existing corporation, by which regular notice was given to the real proprietors of the bridge. This is, then, the common case of misnomer. The amendment may be made on the common rule of an election by the defendant of the costs of the action to this time or a continuance.”
In First National Bank of Baltimore v. daggers, 31 Md. Reports, 43, the court used the following lan*637.guage ; “There is no doubt that where a party is sued by the wrong name, and he appears to the suit and does not plead the misnomer in abatement, and judgment is rendered against him in the erroneous name, execution may be issued upon it in that name, and levied upon the property and effects of the real defendant; but there is some conflict in the decisions whether the same result will follow if he does not appear, and the judgment is obtained by default. The weight of authority, however, is that this makes no difference, and if the writ is served on the party intended to be sued, and he fails to appear and plead in abatement, and suffers judgment to be obtained by default, he is concluded, and in all future litigation may be connected with the suit or judgment by proper averments.”
The same doctrine is stated in “The Lafayette Insurance Co. v. French et al., 18 Howard, U. S., 404, and in Freeman on Judgments, 154, where numerous cases are cited.
In L. & N. R. Co. v. Hall, the plaintiff sued a corporation styled “The Louisville, Nashville and Great Southern Railway Co., “and the summons was executed on Albert Fink, who was designated by the sheriff as vice-president of that corporation. On the calling of the cause, “defendant, by attorney, moved the court to quash the sheriff’s return on the process herein,” and accompanied the motion with an affidavit, by Fink, to the effect there was no such corporation known to him as the one made defendant to the action; and there was, also, an answer filed, in which it was denied there is or ever was any *638such, corporation as the one sued, which was sworn toby “ the attorney for the defendant.” In that case the court said: “The testimony showed beyond cavil, that the proper defendant was in court. It knew its own name. The answer it saw proper to file was in the. nature of a plea in abatement. It presented no defense whatever to the action. * * And as it failed to plead further, and failed to disclose its true corporate name, it can not complain that the judgment was rendered against it in the name by which it had been sued.”
In our opinion, not only according to unvarying authority on the subject, but upon the principle of estoppel and common fairness, when a party enters his appearence and makes defense to an action, he can not afterwards complain of the judgment that may be rendered against him, Upon the ground that he was sued by the wrong name, or what is practically the same thing, that the name of a different person was inserted in the caption of the petition and in the summons ; and it, therefore, necessarily follows that the action must be regarded as commenced and actually-pending against him, at least from the time he so enters his appearance, if not from the time he is served with the summons.
We are then left with the single inquiry in this case whether, or not the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company did enter its appearance and make defense to the action within one year from the alleged killing of plaintiff’s intestate. For if it did, the plea of limitation can not avail. Though the summons was directed against the-Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington *639Railway Company, it was actually served on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company. For M. EL Smith, upon whom it was executed, was, at the time,, the vice-president of the latter and not of the former company. It is true he states, in an affidavit, he was-then the president of the former, but the summons-was served on him as vice-president, not as president..
However, the main question is, in whose behalf the-answer was hied March 3, 1883.
It is alleged and not denied, that when Heckman was» killed, the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway Company did not own or operate the road from Louisville to Lagrange, where the killing occurred, having previously sold and delivered possession and control of it to the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company.
If the answer mentioned had been hied for and on. behalf of the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway Company, it would have been a complete defense to the action against it, and, therefore, of course, stated in the answer that, at the time of the-killing, that company did not own, control or operate-the road, and Hickman was not, as alleged in the petition, its employe. But the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company could not truthfully make such defense, nor was it attempted to be made in the answer. Quarrier, who swore to the answer, was, at the time, an officer of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, and as such, obviously for that company, made the affidavit.
It is alleged in the amended petition that Barnett - & Noble, whose names are signed to the answer, pre*640pared and filed it as the attorneys- of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company. This allegation was, we think, improperly stricken out of the pleading by the lower court; but it makes no difference so far as the question of fact is concerned, for it would have been easy enough for the attorneys to have stated, if it had been true, that they filed the answer of March 3, 1883, for the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway Company.
As this record stands, we are satisfied the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company caused the answer to be filed, and its appearance to the action entered within one year after the plaintiffs intestate was killed; and as, unquestionably, if the plaintiff had any cause of action at all, it was against that company, we think the lower court erred in sustaining a demurrer to the reply. Therefore, the judgment is. reversed, and cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent 'with this opinion.