140 Ky. 47 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
One J. N. Cooley sold a piece of real estate to the appellant, G. W. Gordon, who, in part payment for same, executed and delivered to Cooley his promissory note for seven hundred and fifty dollars, which was secured by a lien upon the land. Cooley, in due course, sold and transferred this note to the appellee, The City National Bank. The debt having become due and not having been paid, The City National Bank instituted this action in the Graves circuit court for a judgment for its debt and enforcement of its lien. To the cause of action set up in the petition the appellant, the maker of the note, interposed the following defense:
“Now the defendant states that at the time of the transfer and assignment of said note by J. N. Cooley to
To this answer a demurrer was interposed and sustained by the court, whereupon the appellant (defendant below) filed an amended answer, in which he reiterated the above quoted defense without anything in addition. A general demurrer was filed to the answer as amended and sustained by the court, whereupon the appellant (defendant) declined to plead further, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff (appellee here) as prayed for in its petition. To test the soundness of the judgment of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the answer, this appeal is prosecuted.
We think the trial court correctly ruled that the answer did not present a defense. It will be observed that the defendant simply alleges that Cooley was justly indebted to him, at the time of the transfer of the note, in the sum of seven hundred and fifty-nine dollars. The allegation that Cooley was justly indebted to the maker of the note in the sum of seven hundred and fifty-nine dollars is a mere conclusion of law. No facts are set forth showing how such supposed indebtedness arose, or that it is valid. Nor is it alleged that the debt from Cooley to appellant was a Subsisting debt at the time the answer was filed. It mav well be true, that Cooley was indebted to Cordon 'at the time, of the transfer of the note, and yet Cooley mav have paid off and fully discharged that debt long before the maturity of the note
No facts are stated to show whether the.alleged indebtedness from Cooley to Gordon was a counterclaim or a set-off. But whether one or the other, in order to constitute a valid defense, the facts showing the indebtedness must be pleaded with the same particularity as if set up as an original action. The Code (section 96) defines both a counterclaim and set-off as causes of action, and, therefore, it was incumbent upon the appellant to state facts necessary to constitute his- cause of action.
It may not be inappropriate also to point out that the-defendant (appellant) failed to state in the caption of his answer that it contained either a set-off or a counterclaim, and, having failed so to do, he was not entitled to a judgment thereon under subsection 4 of section 97 of the Code, which provides that ‘‘a defendant shall not have judgment upon a set-off or counterclaim, unless the caption of the answer contains the words, answer and set-off, or the words, answer and counterclaim.”
Judgment affirmed..