The defendant, in his answer, denies the debt, pleads want of consideration, fraud in the procurement, and notice to plaintiffs of the defects in the check at the time it was acquired by them. These allegations are sufficient to repel the motion to strike the answer. Whether defendant may be able to offer competent evidence in support thereof is another matter.
Upon proof of fraud in the inception of the contract, the burden shifts to the holder of a negotiable instrument to show that he is a holder in due course for value and without notice of the infirmity. G. S. 25-65;
Discount Co. v. Baker,
The language of G. S. 1-123 (1), relating to causes which may be joined in the same action, and G. S. 1-137 (1), defining causes of action which may be pleaded as counterclaims, is substantially the same. The purpose and intent of each is to permit the trial in one action of all causes of action arising out of any one contract or transaction.
Whether joined in the complaint with another cause of action or pleaded as a cross action, the claim must arise out of the contract or transaction sued upon by plaintiff or it must be connected with the same subject of action. Hence, decision on the one is authority on the other.
Prior to the enactment of the statute, a cause of action in tort was not pleadable as a counterclaim to an action on contract. This is now permitted by the language of G. S. 1-137 (1). But even now an action ex delicto may be pleaded as a counterclaim to an action ex contractu only in the event it arose out of the same transaction or is connected with the same subject of action.
As the purpose of the two sections (G. S. 1-123 (1), G. S. 1-137 (1)) is to authorize the litigation of all questions arising out of any one transaction, or series of transactions concerning the same subject matter, in one and the same action, and not to permit multifariousness, it must appear that there is but one subject of controversy. McIntosh, P. & P., 491;
Street v. Andrews,
While the statute is designed “to enable parties litigant to settle well-nigh any and every phase of a given controversy in one and the same action,”
Smith v. French, supra; Sewing Machine Co. v. Burger,
The cross action must have such relation to the plaintiffs’ claim that the adjustment of both is necessary to a full and final determination of the controversy.
Schnepp v. Richardson,
“The 'subject of the action’ means, in this connection, the thing in respect to which the plaintiff’s right of action is asserted, whether it be specific property, a contract, a threatened or violated right, or other thing concerning which an action may be brought and litigation had.” To he connected with the subject of action “the connection of the case asserted in the counterclaim and the subject of the action must be immediate and direct, and presumably contemplated by the parties.” Phillips, Code Pleading, 2d ed., sec. 377, p. 423.
“In respect to the phrase 'connected with’ the subject of the action, one rule may be regarded as settled by the decisions, and it is recommended by its good sense, and its convenience in practice. The connection must be immediate and direct. A remote, uncertain, partial connection is not enough to satisfy the requirements of the statute . . . the connection must be such that the parties could be supposed to have foreseen and contemplated it in their mutual acts; in other words, that the parties must be assumed to have had this connection and its consequences m view when they dealt with each other.” Pomeroy, Code Remedies, 5th ed., sec. 652, p. 1059, sec. 670, p. 1085 ;
Schnepp v. Richardson, supra; Johnson v. Smith,
If, in an action on contract, the cross action is cast in tort, it must rest upon some wrong or breach of duty committed by plaintiff in the *56 making or performance of the contract which is the grounds of the cause of action stated in the complaint. That is, it must rest upon some obligation of the contract upon which plaintiff sues or upon some breach of duty resting upon him by virtue of the transaction which is the grounds of his action.
The uttering of a check, payment of which was refused by the bank on which it was drawn, is the gist of plaintiffs’ action. The subsequent alleged wrongful abuse of criminal process is the taproot of defendant’s counterclaim. Plaintiffs were not parties to the transaction which is the subject of their action. They are entitled to sue merely because they acquired the check in the course of trade. Nor was Thomas, a principal in the check transaction, a party to the alleged abuse of process which occurred after plaintiffs’ cause of action accrued. Hence there is no mutuality of parties or subject matter. Hoyle v. Carter, supra.
While there is a casual relation between the two incidents or “transactions,” there is no causal or interdependent connection. They are not so connected that the circumstances surrounding both must be detailed in order to tell a complete story as to either. Recital of the facts on which plaintiffs’ cause of action rests does not require or permit the inclusion of those forming the basis of defendant’s cross action. Instead, his claim begins where theirs ends. Pressley v. Tea Co., supra.
While the check is involved in both, they constitute two separate and distinct transactions. The collection of the debt evidenced by the check is merely the alleged motive for the commission of the tort,
Price v. Furniture Co.,
Damron v. Sowards,
*57 As plaintiffs win on their appeal from one order and lose on the other, the costs will be divided.
The order denying the motion to strike the answer is
Affirmed.
The order overruling the demurrer is
Reversed.
