8 S.D. 64 | S.D. | 1895
As disclosed by the complaint, the substantive facts upon which plaintiff prays for an accounting with all the defendants are as follows: Plaintiff was the administrator of an estate, and defendants were sureties upon his bond. Defendant being called upon to make good an apparent shortage of $1,200 as shown at that time by plaintiff’s accounts with the estate, demanded and received from said plaintiff, to hol$ only as security for any money which they might be required to advance on account of such stock of
Por a determination of the .issues of law and fact presented by the pleadings, the case was referred to H. H. Potter, Esq., and .the evidence pffered and received under the separate answer
That the various and numerous items and articles of personal property belonging to appellant, and described in his complaint, were pledged to respondents, who were cosureties upon his bond, to secure and indemnify them against loss arising from the failure of appellant to fully account for the estate of which he was administrator, was the theory upon which he sought to establish a fiduciary relation between himself and the several respondents; entitling him to the equitable remedy of an accounting. Although none of the material averments of the complaint were proved at the trial, and the evidence established an unconditional sale and delivery of the property tg
The facts as found being supported by the evidence, and entirely inconsistent with the cause of action stated in the complaint, appellant was not entitled to a money judgment against Chilson, although the findings of fact would support an inference that a portion of the purchase price agreed upon had not been paid. The issues tendered by the complaint being addressed to the equity side of the court, followed by a prayer for an accounting with the numerous persons named and therein charged in a fiduciary capacity, the case was sent to a referee, and a trial thereof disclosed a case for a jury, and established a state of facts which, if proved in an action at law, would entitle appellant, a vendor of personal property, to recover from one of the alleged trustees, but in fact a vendee of goods, wares and merchandise, the balance due upon the purchase price thereof.
When a complaint is framed for equitable relief, and it appears upon the trial that the pleader is not entitled thereto, a judgment at law inconsistent with .the allegations of the complaint, for damages upon a breach of contract to pay a stipulated amount of money, cannot be entered, and the complaint must be dismissed. It was held in Dalton v. Vanderveer (Sup.) 29 N. Y. Supp. 342: ‘‘Where a complaint states a cause of action which is within the jurisdiction of equity, and is not an action at law, and the evidence given on the trial fails to sustain such equitable cause of action, but shows a cause of action at law, the complaint will, nevertheless, be dismissed, as a distinction between equitable and legal actions still exists,