30 Ind. App. 160 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1902
This case is appealed for the second time. On the former appeal, when the present appellees were the appellants, the judgment was reversed because of defects in the original complaint pointed out in Thompson v. Harlow, 150 Ind. 450. After the case had been returned to the trial court the plaintiff (appellant here) filed an amended complaint. Appellant seeks to be relieved from á judgment rendered against her upon default, and proceeds upon the statute which entitles a party to be relieved from a judgment rendered against him — to quote the language of the
The questions presented by the appeal arise on the rulings of the trial court made on motions to strike out parts ;of the amended complaint and upon the demurrer to that pleading. The general questions for decision are: (1) Did the trial court err in sustaining the motion to strike out parts of the amended complaint? (2) Did the trial court err in sustaining separate demurrers of the appellees to the amended complaint ? There were two motions to strike out; one filed by the Eirst National Bank of Seymour and Archibald E. Thompson, the other by Louisa Gray and Martha Mitchell. There were separate demurrers, one by the defendants, Archibald E. Thompson and the Eirst National Bank of Seymour, the other by Martha Mitchell and Louisa Gray.
The amended complaint avers these facts: .That suit upon a note and mortgage was brought in the Jackson Circuit Court by the Eirst. National Bank of Seymour against Garrett E. Harlow, the husband of the appellant, to which suit the appellant and others were made defendants, as judgment creditors of Garrett E. Harlow having judgment-liens upon tire lands covered by the mortgage and junior to the lien of the mortgage of the plaintiff in the foreclosure suit; that the appellant was duly notified of said suit or action; that on making inquiry she was advised by friends in whom she had confidence that said action was nothing more than a suit on said note and mortgage; that she was made a party because she was a junior creditor of her husband by virtue of the assignment by Julia Rosenfield of a judgment against Garrett E. Harlow; that the appellant was advised by the plaintiff in said cause, by its attorney in said cause and by her friends, that the judgment assigned to her by Julia Rosenfield was perfectly good, and could not be attacked in said suit; that her friends so advised her at the plaintiff’s instance and request; that' she did not know
It is an established rule of laAV that where a complaint has been held insufficient on appeal, it is conclusive in a subsequent appeal where no substantial or material amendment of the complaint has been made. State, ex rel., v. Christian, 18 Ind. App. 11. In such case, the law as declared in the first appeal becomes and remains the law of the case, right or wrong, throughout all subsequent proceedings. City of Logansport v. Humphrey, 106 Ind. 146; Nickless v. Pearson, 126 Ind. 477; Poulson v. Simmons, 126 Ind. 227; Continental Life Ins. Co. v. Houser, 111 Ind. 266; Johnson v. Hosford, 110 Ind. 572; Elkhart, etc., R. Co. v. Waldorf, 17 Ind. App. 29.
On the former appeal the Supreme Court' held the complaint bad. When the cause was certified to the court below, the complaint was amended. It is important to determine whether the amendments were of such material character as to relieve it from the infirmities pointed out in the former appeal. It is apparent from the whole scope of the amended complaint that the character of the action has not been changed, and no attempt has been made to change it. It is still a complaint to be relieved from the judgment rendered against appellant “through his [her] mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect,” under the provisions of §399 Burns 1901.
A number of amendments were made, and we shall consider them in the order in which they appear. The amended complaint avers that on a day named the Eirst National Bank filed a suit on a note and mortgage “on certain real
Appellant pleads the priority of a judgment against her husband, which she avers she purchased for a valuable consideration, and which was assigned to her; which said judgment was “of record in the office of the clerk of the said Jackson Circuit Court, and in full force and effect, and a prior lien on his real estate in said county and State, and especially on the land described in the complaint for foreclosure above mentioned.” The amendment which appears in quotation does not add any probative force to the complaint.
It also averred that she was advised by “plaintiff * * * by its attorney,” and “that her friends advised her at said plaintiff’s instance and request,” that her judgment was good, and could not be attacked in said suit. It is further charged that these representations were made to her to prevent her from employing counsel to protect her said judgment. If it be conceded that these amendments were material, they can not avail appellant, for the complaint affirmatively shows that she did not rely upon the statements of her adversary or its attorney, nor the advice of her friends, for it is averred that she did employ counsel to set up the priority of her judgment, and protect her interest therein.
She also avers in her amended complaint that the attoiney for the plaintiff in the foreclosure suit, “assured her that he would protect her said Rosenfield judgment, and he procured E. II. Ahlbrand to assure her also that her said judgment would, by said attorney, be protected.” These averments can not be considered of material importance for two reasons: (1) Appellant did not rely upon them, for she did employ an attorney to protect her rights under the judgment; and (2) the complaint avers that the attorney for the plaintiff in that case did set up the date of her judg
It' is then averred as an amendment that said attorney “did not protect her said judgment in any other way, but afterwards conspired to overthrow said judgment for the benefit of certain of his regular clients, defendants in said cause, as judgment lien holders, namely, Louisa Gray, Nellie Cooley, and Martha Mitchell, defendant's in this suit.” The parties named were not liis clients in that case. The averment that he “afterwards conspired” to overthrow her judgment is the statement of a conclusion, and not of a fact. No person or persons are named as co-conspirators, and a conspiracy can not exist in the mind of one person. Conspiracy is a combination of two or more persons, by some concerted action, to accomplish a criminal or unlawful purpose, or to accomplish a purpose not in itself criminal or unlawful by criminal or unlawful means. Anderson’s Law Diet, 234. The averment under consideration does not specify any act, word, or deed on the part of the attorney that would in any wise connect him with a conspiracy to overthrow appellant’s judgment, and does not add any strength to the complaint.
In the complaint in the former appeal it was averred that appellant employed an attorney “specially” to look after certain interests she had in the litigation, while in the amended complaint she avers that she employed her attorney “generally” to set up her one-third inchoate interest in her husband’s real estate embraced in the mortgage, and “other interests that she had.” These averments make the complaint weaker than it was on the former appeal in this regard, for there she employed counsel only to protect her inchoate interest in the real estate, — she not having joined in the mortgage, — while here she employed him not for that purpose alone, but to protect other interests that she had. If she employed counsel “generally” in that litigation it was his duty to look after and protect any interest she had. It
IJp to this time the complaint avers that the validity of appellant’s judgment had not been attacked, and that on the same day, and after appellant’s counsel had withdrawn, the Eirst Rational Bank and one Thompson filed their answer, although they had been ruled to answer on or before September 21, 1896. In these answers, or rather cross-complaints, the validity of appellant’s judgment was attacked for the first time, and it must be remembered that it was attacked, not by plaintiff’s counsel in the case, but by counsel for defendants, Eirst Rational Bank and Thompson, whose interests were adverse to plaintiff’s. The averments in the amended complaint in this regard are substantially like those in the original, but the amended complaint contains this additional allegation: “Although present by O. IT. Montgomery, attorney, from day to day on the regular call of the docket and the call of said cause, that their said attorney knew of the agreement above mentioned by and between the said W. T. Branaman and A. R. Munden, and knew of the intention of said Munden, as stated in open court, to be absent for the remaining days of court, but concealed from said Munden his intention to answer said
Erom the above quotation it is clear that neither appellant nor her counsel were misled by anything that Mr. Montgomery had said or had done up to that time. If they were misled, surprised, or fraud perpetrated upon them, it arises from the fact that he concealed from them the facts that he expected to aver in the cross-complaints. True, it is averred that Montgomery knew of the intention of appellant’s counsel to be absent from court, and that he concealed his intention to attack said judgment, but appellant’s counsel was bound to know, — and his knowledge was his client’s knowledge,- — that in filing answers and cross-complaints he was but exercising a legal right. He knew that an order was standing upon the court’s record requiring them to answer, for the amended complaint so avers; and, although the order required an answer on or before September 21st, their right to answer had not been foreclosed by any action of the court, and, with the permission of the court, the answer could have been filed at any time. Appellee’s counsel was under no legal duty or obligation to disclose to their adversary the facts they proposed to set up in their answers and cross-complaints. Appellant was in court for all purposes legitimately connected with the then pending controversy.
In passing upon this question the Supreme Court in the former appeal used the following language: “In filing their cross-complaint, the court, in enteidng a rule to anIswer, and in subsequently defaulting the appellee [appellant here], exercised legal rights, and only such rights as the appellee was obliged to know they possessed, and such as her attorney must have known.” Appellant was bound
In this connection it is proper to dispose of the question raised by the action of the court in sustaining appellees’ motion to strike out the words above quoted, and which are embraced in brackets. ' That language applies to the action and conduct of counsel for the First National Bank and .Thompson in that litigation and one of the counsel now representing the appellees. As above stated he did not mislead or perpetrate a fraud upon appellant by anything he did. lie made no agreement of any character with her or her counsel, did not say or do anything to mislead them, and he was under no obligation to disclose the nature of his client’s defense, or what matter he might set up in a cross-complaint. The language stricken out must, in the light of these facts, be regarded as mere epithets, and does not charge fraud, or show any unprofessional conduct, or tend to mislead appellant or her counsel. It does not give any strength or support to the complaint, and there was no error in striking it out.
The original complaint averred that the First National Bank in its foreclosure proceeding, procured a judgment in a sum named, and as regards that judgment the complaint' was amended so as to show that said “judgment and order was spread of record by the clerk of said Jackson Circuit Court, and was duly signed by the judge thereof, and is still in full force and effect.” This amendment is not material, and does not, of itself, make the complaint good.
In the original complaint it was shown that the real estate covered by the mortgage was sold under the decree, the amount realized by the sale, and how and to whom the proceeds were distributed; and in this connection, touching the question of distribution, the amended complaint contains this additional averment: “According to the judgment on said cross-complaint above mentioned.” This
In referring to the order of court requiring appellees to answer in the foreclosure proceedings, the complaint before us contains an amendment as follows: “That said bank and Thompson, by their attorney, failed and purposely omitted to' inform the Hon. S. B. Yoyles, sole judge of the said Jackson Circuit Court, and who was at the time presiding judge in said cause, of the nature and scope of said cross-complaint, but purposely concealed from said judge the nature and scope of said cross-complaint; that had the said judge been informed as to the nature and scope of said cross-complaint he would not have rendered judgment on said cross-complaint as above stated, in the absence of this plaintiff and her said attorney, without first giving her and her said attorney information as to the filing of said cross-complaint, and an opportunity to answer said cross-complaint, according to the practice of said court in such eases.” This amendment states a conclusion, and not a fact. Appellees were under no legal duty to inform the court of the nature and scope of the pleadings filed. The court takes judicial notice of its own records, and is presumed to know what such records contain. When the pleading states that the court would not have taken the action it' did if it had been advised of the facts relied upon, it merely states a conclusion, for it can not be said with any degree of certainty what is in the mind of the court, or what it would have done if it had been differently advised.
Referring, to the proceedings in the foreclosure suit, including the judgments rendered under the cross-complaints of the appellees, appellant amended her complaint by adding the following: “For further and more specific information of the court, this plaintiff now refers to the files and record in the Jackson Circuit Court of civil case No.) 3,445, the same being entitled First National Bank of Seymour, Indiana, v. Garrett F. Harlow, Mary E. Harlow et.
There were other slight amendments to the complaint, but they are of such minor importance that we do not deem it necessary to discuss them.
In the former appeal the Supreme Court decided three questions which it is important to keep in mind, namely: (1) That the mistake relied upon by appellant was one of law, and not one of fact, and afforded her no relief; (2) that where a complaint to foreclose a mortgage makes junior lien holders defendants in such manner as to raise the question of priorities between them, service upon a cross-complaint, filed by one of the defendants, attacking the lien of another defendant; is unnecessary; and (3) that the complaint was bad. It is also important to keep in mind that appellant proceeds under the statute to be relieved from a judgment rendered against her “through her mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.”
Counsel for appellant have discussed the question of fraud on the part of counsel for the plaintiff and counsel for appellees in the foreclosure proceeding, but they do not proceed upon the theory of seeking relief on account of fraud. The fact that appellant employed counsel “generally” to protect her interest, his negligence or neglect becomes her negligence or neglect. Moore v. Horner, 146 Ind. 287; Heaton v. Peterson, 6 Ind. App. 1; Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. v. Hood, 130 Ind. 594. Counsel for appellees made no agreement with appellant or her counsel, and only exercised such rights as the law gave them. Counsel for the
Having determined that the amendments to the complaint are not of such material character as to change the scope and purpose of the pleading, we think every question is decided adversely to appellant in the former appeal. The law as there declared is the law of this case, and must control.
Judgment affirmed.