10 Iowa 276 | Iowa | 1860
The answer of defendants in this case consists of a single count, and is open to the objection of blending together the defenses of fraud, breach of warranty of the property, and failure of consideration.
Either of these defenses would be good of itself; it was wrong, however, to blend them together in one. In the present case the defendants have so mixed them up, that it is impossible to say what is the real defense they seek to make to the action.
If the defense ivas that the note was obtained by fraud and misrepresentation in the. sale of the mill fixtures and
As to the defense, that the fixtures and machinery were not such as plaintiff had represented and warranted them to be, we have no doubt but that it was 'competent for defendants to plead the damages sustained by the breach of the warranty as a set-off to the action on the note. The party will not be driven to another action on the warranty. Reed v. Prentiss, 1 N. H. 164; Shepherd v. Temple, 3 N. H. 455. So the failure of consideration, if properly pleaded, is a good defense. The pleader, in this instance, seems to have had no very clear or definite idea of what defense he wished to rely on, but has mingled together in great confusion defenses, which, to be available to defendants, should have been presented singly. The exceptions to the answer we think were properly sustained.
Judgment affirmed.