1 Ariz. 383 | Ariz. | 1880
By Court,
In the argument of this case it was assumed that the question was raised in this record whether in this territory an equitable defense can be interposed to a complaint setting forth an action at law, and especially whether the defendant pleading such equitable defense can properly ask-that the contract on which the legal action is founded be reformed in such action. There is no doubt that a reformation of the contract on which the action is brought may be properly asked for in the answer in such action, if the action be an original proceeding in equity. This may be done even in an action for the specific performance of such contract. The matter entitling a party to amendment of his contract may be set up by way of defense to a proceeding for a specific performance of it. Woodworth v. Cook, 2 Blatchf. 151.
As to the federal constitutional courts, the rhle and practice is well established that the two systems of law and equity can not be blended in the same action or proceeding. The equity jurisdiction of Ihe purely federal courts is derived solely from the constitution and acts of congress. The equitable jurisdiction of these courts is the same in every state, and the rule of decision is precisely the same in all. Their rule of practice is not regulated or even modified by the state practice. Dodge v. Woolsey, 18 How. 347; United States v. Howland & Allen, 4 Wheat. 108; S. C., 4 Curt. 360. A great many cases to the same effect are found in the United States supreme court decisions, and none contra. The supreme court goes further still; in the case of Jones et al. v. Howard, 20 How. 22, the court say:
This doctrine and practice, so uniformly announced and maintained in all the United States federal courts, has no doubt tiuged the decisions of the territorial courts in some instances.
But the courts of the territories are not United States constitutional courts, but United States territorial courts acting under the statutes of their respective territories; and the question in the case at bar is whether an equitable defense to an action at law can be authorized by territorial statutes, and if so, whether it has been so authorized by territorial enactments in Arizona.
I am of the opinion that both these questions may be-answered in the affirmative. Two cases in the supreme court of Montana are cited by the respondent. But these cases do not reach the case at bar. Iu the summing up of the doctrine of these two cases, in the latter case, iu divisions numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, on page 540, the concluding number 5 reads as follows: “That suits in equity, where equitable relief is prayed, or inhere an equitable defense is set up to a claim at law, must be tried as in a court of chancery, and the decree emanate from the judge sitting as a chancellor.” This is precisely what is prayed for by the defendants in this case.
Porter, J., concurred.
Silent, J., dissented.
After the rendition of the foregoing opinion, a rehearing was granted, upon which counsel for appellants presented the following points:
1. The answer interposes two defenses to the complaint, viz. : 1. A failure of consideration, which would be a good defense at law; 2. Facts showing that the alleged contract had never been entered into by defendants; but, by the mutual mistake of all parties, the paper set out in the complaint failed to express the contract which was really made, and thus constituting an equitable defense.
2. The answer alleges that “the enforcement of any contract by the plaintiff against the defendants herein, or either of them, such as the said plaintiff in and by his said complaint herein asserts, claims, and avers, is evidenced by the said memorandum or writing in said complaint set out, would be a fraud in fact and in law upon said defendants, and each of them, and would in effect foist upon and compel them to perform a contract which they, or either of them, never entered into, made, or assented to in any manner, and for which they did not, nor did either of them, ever have or receive any consideration whatever.” The whole difficulty seems to arise out of a confusion, in the minds of counsel for respondent and the court below, of the contract with the evidence of it; the agreement which was really made and the writing which it is claimed by the plaintiff contains the evidence of the agreement. While the answer
3. The legislature has by statute provided that “there shall be in this territory but one form of civil action for the enforcement or protection of private rights and the redress or prevention of private wrongs.” Comp. Laws, p.-409, sec. 2437. And this statute is in precisely the same words as section 1 of the civil practice act of California and of section 69 of the New York code. The supreme court of California have uniformly held that, under this statute, in the form of the remedy, no distinction exists between legal and equitable rights; although the general principles which govern the case remain unchanged. Jones v. Steamship Cortes, 17 Cal. 498; Lubert v. Chauviteau, 3 Id. 463; Wiggins v. McDonald, 18 Id. 127; Payne v. Treadwell, 16 Id. 243; Cordier v. Schloss, 12 Id. 147. The effect of this section of our statute is to authorize our courts to grant relief under both legal and equitable principles in the same action. The courts no longer recognize the distinction which formerly existed in a declaration at law and a bill in a suit in equity. The complaining party in each case files his complaint containing a statement of the “facts constituting the cause of action in ordinary and concise language.” Comp. Laws, p. 414, sec. 2475. And the court will grant such relief upon such complaint as the plaintiff may be entitled to, without regard to whether the rules of law or principles of equity, or both, are to be invoked. It often happens, in fact, that the courts grant both legal and equitable relief in the same action. To do otherwise would be to utterly disregard the statutes. More v. Massini, 32 Cal. 595; Gates v. Kief, 7 Id. 125; Rollins v. Forbes, 10 Id. 299; Marius v. Bicknell, Id. 217; Truebody v. Jacobson, 2 Id. 269.
This position being once established, the criticism of the learned counsel for respondents, upon the opinion of the majority of this court, is fully answered. In fact, this criticism is entirely without foundation. An examination of the report of the case referred to, Woolman v. Garringer, 1 Mont. 540, will disclose the circumstance that the supreme court
4. But it is contended, in behalf of the respondent, that our statute, while giving this broad scope to the jurisdiction of our courts, and removing the partition walls between their jurisdiction at law and in equity proceedings, has still fettered them by other statutes in such a manner that they must still maintain the old, obsolete fictions, and confine themselves within other limits than those prescribed by the principles of law and equity which are invoked by the facts of the case before them; and section 46 of our practice act is cited in support of this position. This section reads as follows: “The answer of the defendant shall contain: 1. In respect to each allegation of the complaint controverted by the defendant, a specific denial thereof, or a denial thereof according to his information and belief, or any knowledge sufficient to form a belief; 2. A statement of any new matter constituting a defense or counter-claim, in ordinary and concise language.”
What is there in this language to change this rule ? The answer may contain: 1. A denial;-2. A statement of any matter constituting a defense. In the case at bar, as already shown, the answer contains both these defenses. The law defining “counter-claims” has nothing to do with the subject under consideration. Our statute allows a counter-claim; but it also allows, entirely independent of that, any “new matter constituting a defense,” whether it be such matter as comes within the definition of a counterclaim or not.
5. To the point made by respondents’ counsel that the plaintiff, upon the trial of the issues tendered by the answer, would have to rely upon a simple denial, I have to say: 1. This is not correct. Section 2501, p. 418, Oomp. Laws, provides: “The allegation of new matter in the answer shall be deemed controverted by the adverse party, as upon a direct denial or avoidance, as the case may require.” Under this statute the plaintiff would be permitted to give
6. I therefore respectfully submit that the judgment of this court, reversing the judgment of the court below, should not be changed.
And counsel for respondents presented the following points: It seems to us that the new matter set up in and constituting defendants’ answer is in no way or in any legal sense a defense to plaintiff’s action. It nowhere denies or puts in issue any allegation of plaintiff’s complaint, nor does it pretend to confess and avoid; neither is the matter in any way in bar of plaintiff’s action. The term “ defense ” is essentially negative, and not affirmative. Pomeroy, treating of the term “ defense,” says: “The facts from which the defensive right arises may, perhaps, in a proper occasion, and when employed for that purpose, be made the basis for affirmative relief; but when so employed, they would not be a defense. In short, a defense is not to be conceived of as the means of acquiring positive relief, or any remedy, legal or equitable.” Pomeroy’s Eemedies and Eemedial Eights, see. 88.
To entitle a defendant to plead or set up new matter in his answer, it must constitute a defense, or a counter-claim. Now, with, this definition of the term “defense” (and we think it accords with the legal definition from time immemorial), we can not see how the matter set up in defendants’ answer can be construed to fall within its terms. The answer, instead of being negative in its character, is essentially affirmative in every particular. The gist of the answer is, that certain words by mistake were omitted from the writing, and it asks that the writing be reformed by inserting those words. Suppose the relief sought by defendants were granted. What then? The plaintiff’s right of action is founded upon the contract. Would the relief, when granted, be a bar to the plaintiff’s action ? Certainly not. His right
The next point we present is that the new matter set up in defendants’ answer is purely equitable in character; matter of which courts of equity alone have jurisdiction, and with which courts of law can not deal; that the answer consists of new matter, which could not, under the common-law system, have been pleaded as a defense to an action at law. Erom these propositions no one will dissent. Then the question arises, Have the laws of our territory so changed or modified the system as to authorize the pleading in the action at bar ? That the supreme and district courts of this territory are clothed with chancery and common-law jurisdiction by the organic act, and that they can not be deprived of these jurisdictions by territorial legislation, is too clear to be questioned. It will not be disputed that, without legislation, these courts would remain independent the one of the other, and be governed by the well-known distinctions under the common-law system. Admit, for the sake of the argument, that the territorial legislature may prescribe the forms of proceedings in actions at law, and in suits in equity, and may even go so far as to provide that matters belonging separately to each jurisdiction may be tried in the same action; yet, until the legislature does act, the jurisdictions are governed by the rules established by the old system. Then the question as to whether the legislature has so changed the rule as to authorize the blending and trial of matters belonging to the separate jurisdictions in the same action becomes more pertinent. We maintain that it has not. California, New York, and other states and territories have done so, but the'legislature of our territory, following in their wake, and copying most copiously from the statutes of California and New York, seems most studiously to have avoided doing so, by omitting provisions of the statutes of those states most clearly intended for that purpose.
We call the court’s attention to the second clause of section 46 of our practice act: “A statement of any new matter
It seems to us that in this is found an all-sufficient reason for inserting the clause in reference to new matter. Mark the difference between the language used in the statutes of the states, the decisions of which are invoked to sustain the position of defendants, and that of ours. The second clause of the forty-sixth section of the California practice act reads: “A statement of matter in avoidance, a counter-claim constituting a defense, or the subject-matter of cross-complaint tuhich may entitle a defendant to relief against the plaintiff, alone, or against the plaintiff and a co-defendant.” Under this statute, the California qpurts have held that the defendant may set up in his answer, by way of cross-complaint, new matter demanding equitable relief. It seems to us that the California courts may well find the authority to plead this equitable matter, by way of cross-complaint, from the language of that portion of the statute which sa3fs the defendant may set up in his answer “the subject-matter of cross-complaint tuhich may entitle the defendant to relief against the plaintiff.” There can be no question that the California courts do base their decisions upon this statute, and it is equally clear that that portion of the California statute most clearly sustaining those decisions is omitted from our statute. Hence we argue that the decisions of the California courts upon the subject under discussion ought not to have any considerable weight in construing our statute or in determining whether a purely equitable defense can be interposed in an action at law. By the New York code it is provided as follows: “The defendant may set forth by answer as many defenses and counter-claims as he may have, whether they be such as have been heretofore denominated legal or equitable, or both.” Now the New York code contains the exact language contained in the second clause of section 46 of our practice act, but it is immediately followed by that clause just quoted defining the character of the defenses and counter-claim intended. But no such definition
If our legislature had so authorized, then the quotation from the decision in Montana would have been appropriate to the case at bar. We again urge that until our legisla
We maintain that the term “counter-claim,” as used in our statute, was intended to include such matters as could have been formerly pleaded in the particular action, such as set-off, recoupment, and the like. The construction for which we contend will preserve the harmony of our remedial judicial system.
With due deference to the opinion of the court, we insist that the proposition that the answer sets up by any averment a defense at law is erroneous. As the court has said, the matter set up in the answer is a perfect bill in equity, asking for the reformation of the writing set out in the complaint. It is palpable that the pleader had nothing in view but the reformation of the writing. He had no idea when drawing it that it should be used as setting up legal matter which constituted a defense at law, such as the want of consideration. In his prayer he asks for no relief that a court of law could give him, except that he be permitted to go hence with his costs.
The plaintiff in his complaint sets out the writing. The writing declares: “The consideration of this instrument is the execution of the agreement of November 8th of said Houghtaling.” This declaration is an averment of the complaint as to the consideration. The defendants in their an
The court reaffirmed its former opinion.