A bank's mortgage foreclosure action and the defendants' counterclaims for fraud, negligence, and breach of contract are the subjects of the instant appeal. The Citizens Bank & Trust Company of Washington brought suit to collect on a note signed by Pearson E. Gibson and to foreclose a mortgage executed by both Gibson and his wife, Marion, which allegedly secured the note. The Gibsons counterclaimed for damages they аllege accrued to them by reason of the Bank's involvement in the improper negotiation of certain checks by one of Mr. Gibson's employees and in the mishandling of certain wire-transfer funds. The Bank's motion for summary judgment on the counterclaims was granted in part on the grounds that Mr. Gibson's release of the employee was an election of remedies precluding suit against the Bank on the issue of the checks. After trial on the Bank's complaint and the remainder of the Gibsons' counterclaims, the trial court granted judgment in the Bank's favor on the wire-transfer issue in the counterclaim. As for the Bank's original suit, the trial court granted judgment for the Bank on Mr. Gibson's personal liability on the subject note but denied judgment against Mrs. Gibson's personal liability and denied foreclosure on the grounds that Mrs. Gibson was not bound by the terms of the mortgage to bear any responsibility for Mr. Gibson's individual *278 debts. Both parties aрpeal. We disagree with the trial court's grant of summary judgment in the Bank's favor on the counterclaims but also with the court's failure to order foreclosure. Therefore, we reverse on these two issues but affirm in all other respects.
ISSUES
The Bank presents us with a single issue: Whether the trial court's failure to allow the Bank to foreclose a jointly executed mortgage securing an individually executed debt was contrary to the law.
In Mr. Gibson's appeal from the judgments rendered against his counterclaims, he asks that we address the following:
1. Whether the trial court erred in granting partial summary judgment on Mr. Gibson's counterclaims when there existed genuine issues of material fact, as evidenced by his post-trial affidavit, attached to but stricken from his motion to correct errors.
2. Whether it was error for the trial court to refuse to hear evidence on the issue of punitive damages with regard tо the remainder of Mr. Gibson's counterclaim (the wire transfer).
FACTS
Mr. and Mrs. Gibson jointly executed, as "Mortgagors and Borrowers," an "indemnifying" mortgage in favor of the Bank, on or about December 18, 1970. Al though the actual date of signature is somewhat in doubt, both Gibsons acknowledged their signatures on March 9, 1971, and the mortgage was duly recorded on March 13, 1971. Express terms of the mortgage included the following:
"Pearson E. Gibson and Marion M. Gibson, Husband and Wife, ... hereinafter cаlled 'MORTGAGOR' do hereby mortgage and warrant....
"This Mortgage is executed to secure the due and punctual payment of all indebtedness of Mortgagor and Borrowers to Mortgagee whether now existing or hereafter incurred, including all renewals and extensions thereof, not to exceed an aggregate principal amount of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00) and all interest accrued thereon and fees and expenses of Mortgagee incurred in connection therewith....
"Mortgagor shall duly perform the duties and obligations to be performed by it under this Mortgage and shall pay when due all indebtedness of Mortgagor secured by this Mortgage."
Record, pp. 48-49 (emphasis added). The Gibsons signed in the capacities of "Mort gagors and Borrowers. 1 About two years later, on April 2, 1978, Mr. Gibson, alone, signed a note for $77,866.38, secured by the mortgage. Upon default of this note, the Bank brought suit for the debt and foreclosure of the mortgaged real estate against the Gibsons and joined Lafayette Production Credit Association and Fountain County Farm Bureau Cooperative Association to answer to their respective liens against the property. After trial to the court, the judge ruled Mr. Gibson personally liable on the note in the amount of $70,162.84 plus interest of $49,209.83 and reasonable attorney fees of $12,000. However, it also ruled the Bank was not entitled to foreclosure of the mortgage and dismissed Mrs. Gibson and the two credit associations from the action. The Bank appeals, with the trial court's decision being defended by Mr. Gibson and the Lafayette association alone.
The other facet of this appeal deals with the Gibsons' counterclaims for fraud, negligence, and breach of contract. The bases for these claims is not entirely clear, particularly because Gibson's counsel did not set them forth in his appellate brief. However, from what we can piece together, we believe that Gibson is claiming the Bank *279 was involved in the unauthorized negotiation of several checks written either on one of Gibson's business checking accounts or to that account. Evidently, from December, 1970 through May, 1971, the manager of one of Gibson's stockyards, who was authorized to sign checks on the account, wrote and otherwise negotiated several checks (unsanctioned by the business) at the Bank and deposited the funds in his personal account. In addition, Gibson claims the Bank misappropriated a certain wire transfer of funds sent for Gibson's business when the Bank set off certain amounts to his checking account to cover overdraws. The Gibsons sought $500,000 compensatory and $10,000,000 punitive damages on these claims.
After the parties stipulated that certain of the checks were not actionable, the trial court granted partial summary judgment 2 to the Bank on all counterclaims resting upon the remainder of the checks. Its reasoning relied upon a written release signed by Mr. Gibson and his perfidious employee by which Gibson received certain of the employee's assets in exchange for the employee's release from all further claims. The trial cоurt granted summary judgment to the bank on the issue of the checks because it determined Mr. Gibson had elected his remedy by recovering restitution from the employee and was thereafter foreclosed from later pursuing recovery from the Bank. Summary judgment was also had against Mrs. Gibson on all the counterclaims because she had no interest in the affected business matters so Mr. Gibson's allegations regarding the wire transfer were the only issues in the сounterclaims remaining for trial. After trial, the court granted judgment to the Bank on those claims, and Mr. Gibson appealed alone, alleging only the impropriety of the partial summary judgment regarding the checks and the court's failure to allow evidence of punitive damages concerning the wire transfer.
DECISION
Mortgage Foreclosure
The Bank, having prosecuted for foreclosure of this mortgage and having been denied that claim, is appealing a negаtive judgment. We can set aside that judgment only as contrary to law and only if there is neither direct evidence to support it nor reasonable evidentiary inferences to be drawn that would do so. We can neither weigh the evidence nor determine witnesses' credibility but must defer to the trier of fact to resolve any conflicts arising therefrom. Brand v. Monumental Life Insurance Co., (1981) Ind.,
Basic contract principles govern our application of this mortgage's provisions to the consequences of the default by Gibson on his individual note. See, eg., Merchants National Bank & Trust Co. v. H.L.C. Enterprises, Inc., (1982) Ind.App.,
First, we observe that this mort gage is of the open-ended variety, valid in Indiana so long as terms for future advances are explicitly set forth in the instrument. In re Woodruff, (7th Cir.1959)
In the document, Mr. and Mrs. Pearson are referred to in the singular, as the "mortgagor":
"Pearson E. Gibson and Marion M. Gibson, Husband and Wife, ... hereinafter called 'MORTGAGOR ...."
(Emphasis added.) We do not quarrel with the clear intent of these terms that refer to both Gibsons jointly as the singular mort gagor. Observation of the conjunction, "and," makes this self-evident. However, the mortgage was
"executed to secure the due and punctual payment of all indebtedness of Mortgagor and Borrowers to Mortgagee...."
(Emphasis added.) By following the dictates of the principle that we mаy not ignore or eliminate terms of the mortgage, we find that not only are debts of the "mortgagor" secured as joint obligations of Mr. and Mrs. Gibson, but so are those of the "borrowers." And the Gibsons executed the mortgage both as "mortgagors" and as "borrowers." We believe the two terms were meant to encompass different entities and thereby secure both joint and individual debts of Mr. and Mrs. Gibson.
A "mortgagor" is one who, by written agreement, pledges property he owns for a particular purpose, such as security for a debt. 20 I.L.E. Mortgages § 22 (1959). A "borrower," on the other hand, is one to whom something is lent upon his request. BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 231 (Rev. 4th ed. 1968); see also Protective Insurance Co. v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co. (1981) Ind.App.,
"Mortgagor shall duly perform the duties and obligations to be performed by it under this Mortgage and shall pay when due all indebtedness of Mortgagor secured by this Mortgage."
(Emphasis added.) We believe a distinction between "mortgagor" and "borrowers" was intended as a means of distinguishing between joint and individual indеbtedness. By applying this express language of the mortgage to the consequences of Mr. Gibson's individual default, we deem foreclosure of the mortgage appropriate because the agreement expressly secured the individual debts of each of the Gibsons. Thus, the trial court erred in failing to award foreclosure in the Bank's favor, up to the mortgage limit of $50,000 plus interest. In the absence of appellate argument by the *281 Lafayette association and in view of the uncontradicted evidence of the mortgage records, we find the Bank is entitled to priority of its lien in said foreclosure.
Our resolution in this manner does not wholly fulfill the Bank's claims on the debt because Mrs. Gibson was dismissed from the suit on the issue of her personal liability. However, we agree with the trial court on this issue because as we stated above, the mortgage clearly created pеrsonal liability in the Gibsons only for joint indebtedness, by the sole use of the singular "mortgagor." And as one of our statutes clearly requires:
"No mortgage shall be construed as implying a covenant for the payment of the sum to be secured, so as to enable the mortgagee ... to maintain an action for the recovery of such sum; and where there is no express covenant contained in the mortgage for such payment, and no bond or оther separate instrument to secure such payment shall have been given, the remedies of the mortgagee shall be confined to the lands mentioned in the mortgage."
IND.CODE 82-8-11-2 (emphasis added) In the absence of an express covenant here creating personal liability for the indebtedness of both "mortgagor" and "borrowers," Mrs. Gibson is not liable upon any deficiency the foreclosure may create in her husband's indebtedness. Seе also Gallagher v. Central Indiana Bank, (1983) Ind.App.,
(Gibson's Counterclaim
Mr. Gibson contends the trial court erred when it granted partial summary judgment to the Bank upon the claims of fraud, negligence, and breach of contract based upon the allegedly improper negotiation of some of Gibson's checks. Gibson argues a material issue of fact existed, рrecluding summary judgment; however, the fact of the matter is, summary judgment was incorrect as a matter of law.
The trial court issued findings of facts and conclusions of law when it rendered its partial summary judgment. Findings of fact are usually unnecessary in such proceedings because if no material issues of fact are to exist for summary judgment (Ind.Rules of Procedure, Trial Rule 56), findings made to resolve conflicts in evidence are not appropriate. Uhl v. Liter's Quarry of Indiana, Inc., (1979)
The trial court decided the issue on the basis of the theory of election of remedies. The judge found that, because Mr. Gibson had signed a release in favor of the employee who improperly negotiated the checks in exchange for partial restitution of losses, Mr. Gibson had elected to pursue his recovery from the employee and was thereafter prevented from pursuing claims against the Bank. In so deciding, the trial court expressly relied on our decision in V.H. Juerling & Sons, Inc. v. First National Bank of Richmond, (1968)
The doctrine of election of remedies bars the pursuit of inconsistent remedies, i.e. one cannot pursue recovery admitting one statement of facts while pursuing another remedy denying those same facts. City of Hammond v. Beiriger, (1975)
We are aware that the release is indeed in the record, and an alternate ground for deciding the issue may be before us through application of laws regarding releases. However, it appears to us to be inequitable to address a legal theory that does not appear to have been argued before the trial court, and more to the point, to have ever been raised as an affirmative defense, as required by Ind.Rules of Procedure, Trial Rule 8(C). Dawson v. St. Vincent Hospital & Health Care Center, Inc., (1981) Ind.App.,
Evidence of Punitive Damages
Mr. Gibson lastly argues the trial court erred in failing to allow him to present evidence of punitive damages to which he is entitled by reason of the Bank's alleged misappropriation of the wire-transfer funds, the other portion of his counter
*283
claim. Without addressing the merits, we are compelled to find any error harmless. The trial court granted judgment to the Bank on the wire-transfer claims, a judgment Mr. Gibson does not appeal. He therefore has no compensatory damages, which are required bеfore punitive damages can be awarded. See Newton v. Yates, (1976)
The Bank prays for additional forms of relief in the ad damnum portion of its Conclusion section. However, none of these issues were ever argued on appeal, and they are waived. Ind.Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rule 8.3(A)(7).
We therefore reverse on the foreclosure issue, reverse and remand upon the partial summary judgment issue, and affirm all else.
Notes
. The Gibsons also executed a "Continuing Guaranty" to pay the principal sum of $100,000 on their joint personal debts. However, Indiana law plainly denies any effect to a "guaranty" for one's own debts. Indianapolis Morris Plan Corp. v. Sparks, (1961)
. We are not certain as to whеn the motion for summary judgment was made. The record brought up by the pre-appeal order includes only a motion for summary judgment against Mrs. Gibson, consolidated with a motion to dismiss all aspects of the counterclaims. The record does reveal a hearing was held on the matter, and neither party disputes the procedural legitimacy of the court's ruling on the motion. Thus, we assume the parties were accorded sufficient due рrocess that we need not address the matter further.
. Our conclusion in this matter, of course, moots the issues raised by the motion filed here by the Bank to strike portions of Mr. Gibson's reply brief regarding the doctrine of election of remedies. Because the doctrine was altogether inappropriate, it matters not whether Gibson complied with Ind.Rules of Procedure, Appellate Rule 8.3(A)(7) regarding the rule that issues not argued in the original brief cannot be argued in a reply brief, See Flick v. Simpson, (1970)
It further moots Mr. Gibson's disagreement with the trial court's action in striking his affidavit attached to his motion to correct errors, which affidavit he claims raises a significant issue of fact regarding the application of the doctrine of election of remedies. Our decision that the summary judgment was contrary to law makes unnecessary the consideration of such facts. Besides, we beliеve the trial court was correct in so striking because a party may not offer evidence in a motion to correct error which he simply neglected to present at a prior proceeding. Collins v. Dunifon, (1975)
