17 Neb. 252 | Neb. | 1885
The plaintiff and appellee filed her petition in the district court of Johnson county on the sixteenth day of Jan
The pleadings in the case are quite voluminous, but in order to a full understanding of the case it seems necessary that they be substantially given.
The petition states substantially that on the said sixteenth day of January, 1874, the defendant, Collingwood, being indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $3,000, executed to her, under the name of Nellie W. Amos, the note and mortgage declared on, and which are properly set out in the petition. It is alleged that W. Wames, the attorney in fact, was duly authorized to execute the note and mortgage by a power of attorney properly executed and recorded, and that the mortgage was duly recorded in the mortgage records of Johnson county, and that the same was a valid and subsisting lien upon the real estate described therein. That the debt was due and unpaid, no payments having been made thereon, and that no proceedings had been had at law to collect the debt secured by the mortgage. She then avers that the other defendants, naming them, each claim some interest in or lien upon the mortgaged premises, the true nature of which is unknown, but inferior and subsequent to her mortgage. She asks that they be made defendants and her mortgage foreclosed against them as well as against Collingwood.
The defendants, excepting William S. Amos and E. Collingwood, answer jointly, alleging in substance that the legal title to the mortgaged premises is in William S. Amos, the father of plaintiff, and the pretended defendant Edward Collingwood in truth and fact is the said William S. Amos;
The reply of the plaintiff “ denies each and every allegation in said answer contained inconsistent with the statements in plaintiff’s petition herein contained.” The reply
Upon these issues the cause was tried.
No evidence was offered by the plaintiff except the mortgage, which was received without objection. The defendants, to sustain the issues on their part, offered and read the deposition of the plaintiff taken on the ninth day of December, 1881, in an action then pending in the United States circuit court for the district of Nebraska, in which Linus M. Marshall and others were plaintiffs and W. S. Amos and others were defendants. No other testimony was introduced. A decree was entered in favor of plain-' tiff foreclosing the mortgage. From the decree defendants appeal.
The first question presented for decision is as to the proper construction of tlm pleadings. It is insisted by appellants that the reply is and should be treated as an admission of all the allegations of the answer not specifically denied. That the denial in the reply of “each and every allegation in said answer contained inconsistent with the statements in plaintiffs petition,” is not a denial of any allegation of the answer, and therefore the allegations that William S. Amos, William Wames, E. Collingwood, and Edward Collingwood are one and the same person, and Nellie Wames, his daughter, is the plaintiff; that Amos ran away from St. Louis owing the debts due defendants, and secreted himself in Nebraska ‘under one of the above aliases; that plaintiff participated and aided in such concealment by changing her own name to correspond with the assumed name of her father; that the land in controversy was purchased with his own money; that he made the mortgage in suit in one of his assumed names,, by another assumed name as attorney in fact, to another assumed
It is as confidently contended, upon the other hand, that the reply was treated by all parties in the court below as a denial of all the allegations of the answer, except the fact of the indebtedness of Amos and the rendition of the judgments against him, and that good faith would require it to be so treated in this court, even were the reply defective.
It must be conceded that a denial of all allegations of an answer which are inconsistent with the petition falls short of the general denial prescribed by the code, and if objected to by the proper motion to make it definite and certain (Maxwell’s Pleading and Practice, 3d edition, 94) it would have been held bad, and the pleader would have been required to specifically state what allegations of fact he denied. But such a course was not pursued. An examination of the record will show conclusively that the reply was treated as a denial of all allegations of the answer except those above named. It was so treated in the district court, it must be so treated here. If an objection is to be made at all it should be made on the trial, so that the party filing the pleading will not be taken by surprise. Neis v. Franzen, 18 Wis., 542.
Again, the reply denies that the title to the land in question is the land of Amos, and denies all that part of said answer which charges her with conspiring and confederating with said Amos to delay or defraud the defendants or any of his other creditors. It is provided by section 121 of the civil code that, “ In the construction of any pleading, for the purpose of determining its effects, its allegations shall be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties.” Applying this rule to the reply in question, it would seem to justify the course pursued by the parties upon the trial in the court below.
The questions presented by the testimony were submit
It is insisted that the plaintiff’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations. The note matured January 16, 1877. The petition was filed January 16th, 1882. It has so frequently been held that a suit to foreclose a mortgage is not barred until the lapse of ten years that it can no longer be considered an open question. Hale v. Christy, 8 Neb., 264. Stevenson v. Craig, 12 Id., 464. Cheney v. Cooper, 14 Id., 415. Gatling v. Lane, ante p. 77.
The question of the constitutionality of the amendatory act extending the limitation to ten years is fully discussed in the opinion on the motion for rehearing in Gatling v. Lane, supra, and nothing further need be here added. We are satisfied with that decision.
Whatever there may be of suspicion and doubt surrounding this case, we do not think it can be said, in the light of the evidence, that the decision of the court below was wrong.
The decree of the district court must therefore be affirmed.
Degree affirmed.