54 Iowa 604 | Iowa | 1880
The action is not named in the petition. The prayer for relief is that “ the defendants may answer the premises, and that they may be severally enjoined and restrained from asserting any right or rights,” under the judgments aforesaid, “ that a rehearing and new trial of said causes may be * * granted upon all the issues therein, that upon the hearing of the same this plaintiff may have judgment against the defendants * * that plaintiff may have judgment against the said defendants for costs, and that he may have such other relief as to this court may seem just and equitable.”
An injunction was granted as prayed, and on the 18 th day of October, 1819, the demurrer was filed, and on the 21st day of said month the cause, by agreement of the parties, was transferred to the equity docket, and, thereupon, the cause came on to be heard on the demurrer. We incline to think the relief asked fairly indicates the petition was intended by the pleader to state and set forth an equitable cause of action. If a new trial is asked by petition at law, under the statute, it should be in the cause that was tried, and if there were two such causes a petition should be filed in each. But be this as it may, the parties treated this as an equitable proceeding. It was so treated by the court below. It was tried or heard as being in equity. No objection was made below that the demurrer was not sufficiently specific because the action was at law. If such objection had been made, the demurrer, by leave of the court, might have been made more specific. The plaintiff should not now for the first time be permitted to say the action is at law, and that the demurrer should be disregarded.
It is not alleged in the petition that a new cause of action or defense has arisen since the judgments were rendered. It, however, is averred that by reason of the fraud of the defendants the plaintiff was defeated in one, and judgment rendered against him in the other action, and that important evidence has been discovered since the former trials. For both of these a new trial under the statute may be granted, and neither amounts to a new cause of action or defense.
We deem it proper to say we incline to think if the action had been for a new trial, under the statute, the demurrer should have been sustained, if it had been sufficiently specific.
Affirmed.