54 Ind. 91 | Ind. | 1876
This suit is upon a complaint as follows: “ The Indiana State Board of Agriculture, a corpora
“ Indianapolis, July 24th, 1873.
“ I hereby agree to give the State Board of Agriculture, for dining hall on state fair grounds, during state fair and exposition of 1873, the sum of one thousand and six hundred dollars, ($1,600.00,) subject to the following conditions, viz: I am to make all the improvements necessary to the running of a first class dining hall, at my own expense, including cost of gas consumed. The State Board of Agriculture agrees to build kitchen and store-room, level floor, and build reception room over the centre of the hall. Terms : one-half, cash; balance, on or before October 1st, 1873.
Signed, “ J. W. Gray.
“ H. Caldwell, Chair. Com.
“ H. W. Caldwell.”
“ The plaintiff avers that it also executed the said contract by and through said EL Caldwell and EL W. Caldwell, its agents, duly authorized and empowered to make the same; that the plaintiff is the real party in interest in said contract, and entitled to receive the benefit thereof; that the plaintiff duly performed, all and singular, the conditions and stipulations on its part to be done and performed ; but that the defendant has failed to perform the conditions on his part to be done and performed, in this; that he has wholly failed and refused, and still fails and refuses, to pay the plaintiff sixteen hundred dollars, although the same is due and wholly unpaid. Wherefore the plaintiff prays judgment, etc.”
We quote a statement of the answer, from the brief of appellee:
“ The appellee answered in three paragraphs; one by way of set-off, and the other two by way of counterclaim, and payment as to part. Both paragraphs of*93 counter-claim alleged that the contract, as reduced to writing, was not the contract as made; prayed for its reformation, charged a breach of the contract, and claimed damages therefor;” [but did not give a copy of any contract;] “one paragraph charging fraud on the part of appellant’s agents, and the other a mistake of both parties in reducing the contract to writing, and both showing circumstances tending to excuse the appellee’s oversight of the true character of the writing, at the time of its execution.”
The first paragraph of counter-claim contained the following averment, viz.:
“And defendant further avers that though he complied in all respects with all and singular the stipulations and conditions of said contract on his part to be done and performed, the said plaintiff1 utterly failed and refused to comply with the conditions and stipulations on its part to be done and performed, in this, to wit: utterly failed and refused to level floor of the dining hall, as per contract. The second paragraph of counter-claim contained a similar averment.”
Eeply in denial.
It will be observed that there was no general denial of the complaint.
When the cause came on for trial in the court below, both parties claimed the right to open and close. The court decided in favor of the defendant, the plaintiff in the counter-claim, and the plaintiff in the cause excepted. Yerdiet and judgment against the plaintiff in the cause, on the counter-claim, for between five and six hundred dollars.
Did the court err in its ruling on the question of the right to open and close ?
It is claimed by the plaintiff in the cause, that the averment in the counter-claim of the defendant, that the plaintiff failed to level the floor of the dining hall, is a traverse of the averment in the complaint that the plain
. It is a rule that a good traverse must deny a material allegation in the previous pleading.' Stephen on Pleading, p. 193. But tbis is unimportant here, as another rule of pleading, established by tbis court, compels us to decide tbis cause against tbe plaintiff.
Tbe paragraphs of tbe defendant’s answer were, severally, counter-claims. They severally alleged a cause of action against tbe plaintiff, and sought affirmative relief. Tbis being so, they fall directly within tbe rule declared in Campbell v. Routt, 42 Ind. 410. In tbe opinion it is said, “We are of opinion, however, that no single pleading can be made to perform tbe double function of alleging matter in bar of an action brought by one party, and at the same time of setting up a cause of action in favor of tbe other. * * * * Whether tbe pleading in any given case is one thing or tbe other must be determined from tbe character, of the pleading and tbe averments thereof, but it can not be both.”
Under this rule, tbe averments in the counter-claim, in tbe case at bar, denying an allegation in tbe complaint, it it contained such, went for naught, and the counter-claim' must be treated as a pleading setting up new matter only, and, hence, not as traversing any averment in tbe complaint.
Tbe conclusion follows that all tbe averments in tbe complaint were admitted, tbe burden of proving bis
The judgment is affirmed, with costs, and one per cent, damages.