The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled. The agreement of indemnity, set up as the basis of recovery, related to land not covered by the pre-existing sale of standing timber. Upon the allegations, it was both subsequent to and entirely outside of that transaction. Ample consideration to sustain it is to be found in the promisees' action in conformity to the agreement, and the resulting loss to them. Clark v. Sigourney,
The demurrer to the set-off and counterclaim raises the question of the defendant's right to counterclaim his cause of action set up. The use of set-off and counterclaim in our practice results from and is regulated by that section of the Practice Act which is now § 612 of the General Statutes. There are certain other statutes, such as §§ 624, 640 and 650 et seq., and certain Rules of Court, such as §§ 171 to 175, touching the matter; but they are of only incidental consequence, *Page 440
and do not materially concern the present inquiry. We had occasion in Boothe v. Armstrong,
All permissible counterclaims were thus, for description and treatment, divided into two classes, to wit: those which are claims by way of set-off, and those which are not. We have no concern here with claims of the first class, whether the term "set-off," as used in the definition given, should be understood broadly as descriptive of set-off in its most comprehensive sense, as defined by some statutes regulating set-off in actions at law, and also equitable set-off as administered *Page 441
in courts of equity, or in some more strict and narrow sense determined by our statute. It is evident, however, that the definition to be complete must be construed to embrace equitable set-off. Courts of equity exercised jurisdiction upon the subject of set-off before the statute of 2 Geo. II, which first conferred upon courts of law the power to do so. The enactment of that and following statutes in England and this country made the occasions rare when equity courts were called upon to exercise their jurisdiction. But they retained it, and upon proper occasion exercised it, where the law courts were unable to accomplish what equity demanded by reason of their being circumscribed in their power by the statutes. Blake v. Langdon,
The complaint is one upon contract. The counterclaim sets up a cause of action in tort. The subject of *Page 442 action in the former is an agreement of indemnity; in the latter it is the cutting of trees upon the defendant's land. The matters in controversy in the one case arose from a breach of the contract, and in the other from the trespass committed. So far it is difficult to discover anything in the situation to form any connecting link between the two causes of action, except that the plaintiffs and the defendant are the parties involved in both cases. This clearly is not enough to justify the counterclaim of the one cause of action against the other.
If we look further for some feature which might be claimed to furnish such justification, it appears that the agreement sued upon by the plaintiffs was given to indemnify them for the consequences of their cutting the timber upon a tract of land belonging to one Gardner, which tract adjoined along its south boundary another tract owned by the defendant, and over which the plaintiffs had acquired the right to cut, which last-named tract in its turn adjoined on its south side other land of the defendant, in which the plaintiffs had no rights, and that, by possibility, although that fact is not averred, the cutting upon the northernmost or Gardner tract and that upon the southernmost tract owned by the defendant, were done as a part of one general cutting enterprise, which involved both them and the intervening tract. In other words, it is possible by going far enough back in the history of events to arrive at a point where two torts are reached, which, while essentially independent, and committed against different persons and upon separated lands in different ownership, have this possible connection between them, that they were both committed at some time in the pursuit of a common enterprise.
A closer connection it is impossible to get, and this does not approach to conformity to any rule regulating the right of counterclaim which has ever been formulated *Page 443
in code or statute, or applied by judicial construction, as far as we are aware. It certainly does not to that stated in Harral v. Leverty,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.