delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves a question of procedure and turns on the construction of Equity Rule 30. An understanding of the point at issue requires a statement of the facts and the course of the litigation.
In September, 1918, the Hartenfeld Bag Company, which was ip a failing condition, owed the American Mills Company, the petitioner, about $22,000, which-it was unable to pay. The Mills Company and the Bag Company made a contract, the performance of which by the Bag Company. the American Surety Company guaranteed. The contract recited that the Mills Company had paid in advance to the Bag Company $22,100 for which the Bag Company was to deliver certain merchandise within seventy-five days, and in default of this delivery, the' money was to be returned. The Bag Company delivered only $1,050 worth of goods and then went into bank-' ruptcy. The fact was that the Mills Company had never made the advance payment of $22,000 recited in the contract, but instead’ of that, some days after the execution of the contract, the Mills Company and the Bag Company exchanged checks for a little less than this amount in ordér to create- the appearance of -a genuine transaction. The effect of what was done" was that the Mills Company received a guaranty from the Surety Company of a bad debt, while the latter company thought it was insuring the performance of a
bona fide
contract of sale and delivery of goods by the Bag Company for which that company had receivéd the full purchase price in advance. In December, 1918, after demand .for payment
It is conceded by the respondent that its bill in equity in the District Court should have been dismissed because it had an adequate remedy at law. The cases of
Insurance Co.
v.
Bailey,
Did petitioner waive it? It made the objection seasonably both by answer and by motions to dismiss. The motions were denied without prejudice to their renewal when the cause should come-on for hearing before the trial court. The defendant instead" of renewing its motion to dismiss or insisting on the sufficiency of the first defense of its answer, introduced proof of its right to an affirmative judgment for the full amount of the guaranty, putting the written instrument in evidence. This certainly constituted a waiver unless the contention of the defendant, the petitioner here, that Equity Rule 30 required it to put in proof of its claim on penalty of being barred from prosecuting it at law, is sound.
The relevant part of Rule 30 is as follows:
“ The answer must state in short and simple form any counter-claim arising out of the transaction which is thesubject matter of the suit, and may, without cross-bill, set out any set-off or counter-claim against the plaintiff which might' be the subject of an independent suit in equity against him, and such set-off or counter-claim so set up, shall have the same effect as a cross-suit, so as to enable the court to pronounce a final judgment in. the same suit both on the original and cross-claims.” (Italics ours.)
’ The petitioner argues that must and may. are here set over against one another for the purpose of enforcing the intention and effect of the rule to require the defendant in an action in equity to set out any counterclaim arising out of the subject-matter of the bill, but to leave it to the option of the defendant whether a counterclaim or setoff not arising out of the same transaction shall be interposed or shall be prosecuted' by ‘independent bill. The respondent contends that while this may be correct, the counterclaim growing out of the same transaction must be an equitable claim and not a legal one as here. We concur in this view..
The new Equity Rules were intended to simplify equity pleading and practice by limiting the pleadings to á statement of ultimate facts without evidence and by uniting in oné action as many issues as could conveniently be disposed of. But they normally deal with subjects-matter of which, under the dual system of law and equity, courts of equity can properly take cognizance. They certainly were not drawn to change in any respect the line between law and equity as made by the federal statutes, practice and decisions when the rules were promulgated.' By the construction which petitioner would put upon Rule 30, it is an attempt to compel one who has a cause of action at law to bring it into a court of equity and then try it without a jury whenever the defendant in that cause can find some head of equity jurisdiction under which he can apply for equitable relief in respect of the subject-matter. The order of procedure as between the law and equity
The result is that the petitioner as defendant was not obliged to set up and prove its action at law under Rule 30, and when it did so, by its affirmative action, it waived its previous objection to the equitable jurisdiction and also its right of trial by jury. An analogous effect of such affirmative action in pressing a counterclaim is seen in
Merchants Heat & Light Co.
v. J.
B. Clow & Sons,
Decree affirmed.
