76 Ind. 429 | Ind. | 1881
The complaint in this case was in three paragraphs.
The first paragraph alleged that, on the 11th day of August, 1870, the plaintiffs, James E. Burton, Etilman J. Stark •and Andrew J. McNeely executed their promissory note to one William McNeely, for the sum of $500, payable five years and three months after date, with interest to be paid annually; that afterwards McNeely, the payee, endorsed the note to one William M. Simpson, who, by his endorsement thereon, assigned $400 of such note, with interest, to one Henry C. Harris; that afterwards the said Simpson, by a like endorsement, assigned $163 of the same note to one John R. King; that afterwards the said Henry C. Harris ■died, leaving Henry C. Harris, Jr., his only heir at law, who was a minor, and of whose person and estate Minerva B. Harris had become guardian; that afterwards, on the 14th ■day of April, 1876, the said Minerva B. Harris, as such guardian, and the said John R. King commenced a joint action in the Monroe Circuit Court, on the note above described against the plaintiffs, upon whom process was duly seiwed ; that afterwards, on the 9th day of September, 1876, judgment was rendered on said note against the plaintiff by default, $554.10-being adjudged to be due the said Minerva B. Harris, guardian as above stated, and $119.40 to be due the said King ; that the plaintiffs Stark and McNeély were only sureties' on said note ; that, before suit was brought on the note, the plaintiff Burton, the principal therein, had
The third paragraph was a common count for money had and received by the defendants from the clerk of the Monroe Circuit Court, for the use of the plaintiffs. The defendants demurred severally to all the paragraphs of the complaint, and their demurrer was sustained to the first paragraph, but overruled as to the second and third paragraphs.
The defendants then answered in general denial of the second paragraph of the complaint, and a former adjudication to the third paragraph, the adjudication consisting of the proceedings and judgment set forth in the first and second paragraphs of the complaint. The plaintiffs, demurred to the answer of former adjudication, but their demurrer was overruled, and they replied in denial. Trial by the court; finding for the defendants; motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment for the defendants.
The plaintiffs, as the appellants, have assigned error upon the sustaining of the demurrer to the first paragraph of their complaint, upon the oyerruling of their demurrer to the answer of a former adjudication, and upon the refusal of tha court to grant them a new trial.
The appellees have assigned cross error upon the overruling of their demurrer to the second paragraph of the complaint. Neither the first nor second paragraph of the complaint can be sustained as a complaint for the review of a judgment. No error of law is apparent on the face either .of the proceedings or of the judgment complained of. Nor was the discovery of any new matter alleged. Nor was a. complete record of the original proceedings and judgment filed with either one of those paragraphs, as is required in;
Both the first and second paragraphs of the complaint were also insufficient as applications for relief against the judgment referred to by them respectively, under section 99 of the code, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 82.
We construe the allegations of those paragraphs to mean that the court, upon the assessment of damages upon the note, either misapprehended the evidence, or by some other mistake assessed the damages at too large a sum. Section 99, supra, does not provide for relief against such mistakes or errors of the court as are thus charged to have been committed. Applications for relief under that section must be on account of some mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect of the party applying for relief under it, and not on the part of the court. Nelson v. Johnson, 18 Ind. 329. At all events, no sufficient excuse was alleged for the failure of the appellants to appear in the action and to-see that all proper credits were allowed upon the note. Lake v. Jones, 49 Ind. 297. Nor was the mistake charged to have-been made a merely clerical mistake, which might be amended upon notice and motion to amend the judgment. Sherman v. Nixon, 37 Ind. 153. There was, therefore, no error in the decision of the court sustaining the demurrer to the first
No specific objection has been pointed out to the answer of a former adjudication, to the third paragraph of the complaint as to that paragraph, the evidence showed a former adjudication of the transaction upon which a recovery was demanded under it. For this reason the court did not err in refusing to grant a new trial in the cause.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.