137 S.E. 705 | N.C. | 1927
Civil action to recover on a 60-day negotiable promissory note for $5,000, alleged to have been executed by Angelo Brothers to the Merchants Bank and Trust Company, 13 March, 1926, duly endorsed to the plaintiff for a valuable consideration, before maturity and without notice of any defect or equity, constituting the plaintiff a holder thereof in due course.
The defendants, M. A. Angelo and T. J. Angelo, partners, trading as Angelo Brothers, answered, alleging that on 23 April, 1926, before the note was due, the sum of $4,985 was paid by them to Thomas Maslin, president and managing officer of the Merchants Bank and Trust Company, in payment of said note; that the same was not surrendered because the said Maslin, with fraudulent intent, falsely represented that it was lost or misplaced, and that it would be surrendered as soon as found; that the note was then and is now in the possession of the plaintiff as collateral security; and that on the date of payment, and thereafter until closed by the Corporation Commission, the said Merchants Bank and Trust Company was insolvent, and known by its officers and directors to be insolvent. Whereupon, Angelo Brothers asked that the receiver of the Merchants Bank and Trust Company, together with its officers and directors, be made parties defendant in this action, to the end that they might have judgment over against them in case the plaintiff be awarded judgment on the note in suit. *577
Upon the receiver and the officers and directors of the Merchants Bank and Trust Company being made parties defendant, Angelo Brothers filed an amended answer and cross-complaint, alleging in effect:
1. That they are entitled to compel the plaintiff to satisfy its demand out of other collateral held by it.
2. That they are entitled to recover of the receiver of the Merchants Bank and Trust Company the sum of $4,985, because of the fraud of its president in wrongfully obtaining said sum and refusing to apply it to the payment of said note.
3. That they are entitled to recover of the defendant Thomas Maslin whatever loss is sustained on account of his fraudulently inducing them to part with their money.
4. That they are entitled to recover of the officers and directors of the Merchants Bank and Trust Company any loss sustained by them because said directors knowingly permitted the bank to remain open while insolvent, thus obtaining their money fraudulently, etc.
To the cross-complaint of Angelo Brothers, the appellants herein, C. A. Kent, W. H. Watkins, T. V. Edmunds, W. H. Maslin, W. H. Hanes, Wade H. Bynum, S. F. Vance, and S.D. Craig, directors of the said Merchants Bank and Trust Company, severally demurred upon the ground of a misjoinder of both parties and causes of action. From a judgment overruling said demurrers, the demurring defendants appeal, assigning errors.
after stating the case: The cross-actions of Angelo Brothers as against the receiver, on the one hand, and the officers and directors of the Merchants Bank and Trust Company, on the other, are separate and distinct; they are founded on different causes of alleged liability — the one sounding in contract, the other in tort; they are set up against different parties; and they are incorporated in the same complaint. Under all the decisions, such a pleading is subject to demurrer. *578 Harrison v. Transit Co.,
The several causes of action which may be united or joined in the same complaint are classified and enumerated in C. S., 507; and, in addition, the following limitation is expressly incorporated therein; "But the causes of action so united must all belong to one of these classes, and, except in actions for the foreclosure of mortgages, must affect all the parties to the action, and not require different places of trial, and must be separately stated." See R. R. v. Hardware Co.,
But it is suggested that even if the several causes of action have been improperly united in the same pleading, a separation or division should be ordered under C. S., 516. It is well settled that where there is a misjoinder, both of parties and of causes of action, and a demurrer is interposed upon this ground, the demurrer should be sustained and the action dismissed. Robinson v. Williams,
This case presents a striking illustration of the wisdom of the rule established by these decisions. If the plaintiff hold the note in suit only as collateral, and the remaining collateral held by it be amply sufficient, as alleged, to discharge its obligation, then the bringing into this suit of the other defendants would seem to be wholly unnecessary. At any rate, we think the demurrers filed herein are well founded, and that the cross-actions, as against the demurring defendants, should be dismissed.
Reversed.