203 Ky. 817 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
-Affirming.
On April 3, 1919, appellee, and plaintiff below, K. Z. Wilking, filed this ordinary action in the Breathitt circuit court against the appellant and defendant below, Janies Duff, seeking to recover a judgment against him for the amount of a note' he' executed to- plaintiff on January 30, 1919, whereby he agreed to pay plaintiff on or before February 3 of the same year tire sum of $1,000.00. In the note (which was also signed by plaintiff) following the promise of defendant there is this statement: “And said K. Z. Wilking hereby agrees to surrender a certain agreement and assignment of an oil and gas lease made July 2,1918, covering a tract of land known >as the Trent tract, upon the said payment of the $1,000.00.” That language would seem to indicate, and which the pleadings in the case assert is true, that the note was executed by defendant in consideration of an assignment at that time of an oil and gas lease, on a tract of land'known as the Trent tract and-the surrendering of an agreement between plaintiff and defendant with reference to that lease made on July 2, 1918. The answer admitted the execution of the note sued on, but averred that it was not the intention of the parties that defendant should be personally bound thereby because of an alleged understanding at the time that-he was executing it for an undisclosed principal. In another paragraph def end-•ant attempted to plead as a counterclaim or set-off that on July 2, 1918, h-e owned the oil and gas lease on the Trent tract of land, and on that day assigned and transferred it to plaintiff, and that there were certain agreements on the part of the latter in that written assignment, about developing the lease, with which he had not complied and by reason thereof defendant was damaged in the sum of $3,000.00, for which he prayed judgment against plaintiff. The court sustained a demurrer filed to the answer and defendant declining to plead further, judgment was rendered against him and complaining that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to his answer he prosecutes this appeal.
Clearly the answer cannot be considered as a counterclaim since to be such the matters relied-on therein must grow out of and proceed from the cause of action stated in the petition. Section 96, subsection 1, Civil Code of Practice, and cases found in notes thereto. The assignment of the lease to plaintiff on July 2, 1918, and
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.