23 Ind. 223 | Ind. | 1864
This case has been under consideration in this court before, (17 Ind. 198,) and the averments in the original complaint are fully stated by Davison, J., in delivering the opinion After the case was certified back at the February term, 1862, of the Hendricks Circuit Court, the appellee, who was the plaintiff below, on leave, filed a supplemental complaint, setting up, in addition to the allegations in the original, the further averments that, since the filing of the original complaint, the railway company, by her assignees, had caused an execution to issue on the $3,000 judgment, had caused the same to be levied on appellee’s homestead and all his personal property, and had caused an entire sacrifice of all of said property to satisfy said execution, and averring that he had been damaged in the sum of $20,000, for which sum he demanded judgment.
To the original and supplemental complaint, the appellant filed a plea in abatement, setting up that the railway company did not have its main business office in Hendricks county, and that the process was not served on any special or general agent of the company in said county, etc.
The railway company had appeared and filed a demurrer to the original complaint; the demurrer had been sustained; final judgment; appeal to this court; judgment reversed, and cause certified to the Hendricks Circuit Court. It was too late to file a plea in abatement, going only to the jurisdiction of the court over the person of the defendant..
The appellant filed an answer to the complaint in six paragraphs. 1. The general denial. 2. That Todd was not the agent of the company authorized to enter into and
The plaintiff below then filed replies to the second and third paragraphs of answer: 1. General denials. 2. As to second paragraph of answer, that defendant accepted the deed from plaintiff to defendant, conveying the land in the complaint mentioned, which deed was the consideration for the promise of forbearance sued on; retains the same, and refuses to re-convey. 3. As to third paragraph of the answer, that plaintiff never confessed or offered to confess judgment on the $3,000 subscription until after suit had been instituted against him, summons served, and a'rule entered against him to answer, etc. 4. As to third paragraph of answer, nul tiel record. Ajopellant demurred separately to the second and third paragraphs of the reply, which demurrers were sustained. The issue of nul tiel record was submitted to the court, and while the same was under hearing, the court directed a re-argument of the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer without the withdrawal by appellee of his replies thereto. And on such re-argument sustained the demurrer to said paragraph, and the appellant excepted.
Trial of the issues of fact by a jury; verdict for $10,000; motion for new trial overruled; and defendant below excepted ; judgment on the verdict.
It is urged by appellant that the contract of forbearance on the cash subscription to the capital stock of the Sailway company is against public policy and void, because it would defeat every object for which the company was incorporated. We think otherwise. The company by the arrangement acquired $8,200 in real estate, thereby increasing her means of carrying out the object of her creation. But we regard this question settled by the previous decision.
It is contended that the Circuit Court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the fifth paragraph of answer, setting up
It is urged that the court erred iu sustaining the demurrer to the sixth paragraph of the answer. Scearce having failed to plead the agreement for forbearance in the original action, could not avail himself of that defense to a suit on the judgment. Had he filed a complaint to enjoin the judgment on the ground of this agreement, the adjudication would have been final; but a fruitless attempt -to set up this defense in the action on the judgment amounts to nothing.
The damages are excessive ; under no circumstances can the measure of damages in a case like this be more than the amount to be forborne, with interest and costs to the sale. An agreement to forbear for a limited time can not amount to more than a release of the debt. The-damages arising from a forced sale are too remote. They are not the natural and proximate result of the alleged breach. “ Causa próxima non remota speetatur.” Deyo v. Waggoner, 19 John. R. 242. But, under the facts of this case, the sacrifice by the forced sale was the result of the subsequent agreement waiving valuation and appraisement laws.
Judgment reversed; cause remanded, with directions to the court below to order a new trial, to overrule the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion. Costs here.