231 N.W. 938 | S.D. | 1930
Appellant brought three actions to recover upon eight promissory notes payable to it, claiming thereon an aggregate of $4,358.72 with interest from December 20, 1928. The defendants in the first case were N. F. Nelson, Leonard Tufty, and Herbert I. Tufty, makers of a nóte due May 1, 1927. The defendants in the second case were N. F. Nelson and Leonard Tufty, copartners doing business as Nelson & Tufty. The five notes on which recovery was sought therein were each dated March 15, 1928, and matured from August 1, 1928, to November 1, 1928. The defendant in the third case was N. F. Nelson, maker of two notes, one due October 1, the other December 1, 1928.
The first answers of the defendants admitted the execution of the various notes and alleged payment. Later, defendant Nelson served and filed amended answers alleging additional facts by way of counterclaim. Demurrer to these counterclaims having been sustained, defendant Nelson served! and filed second amended answers and counterclaims. In these answers, he alleged that, some time prior to the execution of the several notes, he was engaged in the sale of farm machinery purchased from the plaintiff, and that, in the month of July, 1928, the plaintiff without his knowledge, converted to its own use by force all the stock of goods, consisting of farm machinery belonging to him, and took said machinery valued
In the allegations denominated “counterclaims,” 'defendant Nelson alleges that for some time prior to the giving of the note in suit Leonard and Herbert Tufty were engaged in the business of selling farm machinery at Nunda, S. D.; that, about February 23, 1928, upon plaintiff’s promise that it would supervise the business, defendant Nelson was induced to enter into' an agreement with Leonard Tufty whereby Nelson became responsible for selling said farm machinery and assumed the obligations 'theretofore incurred by Tufty Bros, to plaintiff; that in July, 1928', plaintiff, without the knowledge or consent of the defendant Nelson, converted to' its own use all of said! machinery and stock of goods belonging to the defendant Nelson, and thereby destroyed every opportunity on the part of the defendant Nelson to make any profits and destroyed the business of the defendant Nelson; that defendant Nelson was also engaged in the elevator business at the town of Nunda and had established a reasonable line of credit and' a good honest business reputation; and that, by reason of the acts of plaintiff in destroying defendant’s business and destroying his opportunity for profit, the reputation of the defendant and his credit and standing at Nunda, S. D., were wholly destroyed, to defendant’s damage in the sum of $15,000.
The allegations by way of counterclaim in defendants’ first amended answers stopped at this point. In his second amended answers, he supplemented' the foregoing with the following:
“That this matter of counterclaims grows out of the transactions upon which plaintiff seeks to recover in this action, in the manner following; that the notes and obligations upon which plaintiff seeks to recover in' this action are notes and obligations given by this defendant in connection with the agreement and arrangement wherein this defendant assumed the various obligations of the
If the foregoing alleges a cause of action in tort — and respondent does not contend otherwise — then the demurrer thereto should! have been sustained unless that cause of action conforms to section 2354, subd. 1, Rev. 'Code 1919. Assuming that a cause of action is sufficiently alleged in respondent’s counterclaim, does that cause of action arise out of the contract or transaction set forth in appellant’s complaint, or is it connected with the subject of the action therein alleged, as required by section 2354, subd. 1 ? In the' counterclaim, defendant reiterates the statement that this matter of
It must be admitted that the opinion in Advance Thresher Co. v. Klein, 28 S. D. 177, 133 N. W. 51, 53, L. R. A. 1916C, 514, following McHard v. Williams, 8 S. D. 381, 66 N. W. 930, 931, 59 Am. St. Rep. 766, and Northwestern Port Huron Co. v. Iverson, 22 S. D. 314, 117 N. W. 372, 133 Am. St. Rep. 920, furnishes considerable support to respondent’s contention. But it was upon allegations in a counterclaim far from identical with the foregoing that the court said:
“The matters set out in the complaint and the matters set out in the counterclaim are intimately and closely connected, and have their origin in the same transaction. The said acts of said servant and agent of plaintiff, which constitute the negligence complained of in the counterclaim, were performed under and 'by virtue of the contract of sale which furnished the basis for the consideration of the notes sued upon.”
In McHard v. Williams, supra, the court said:
“One of the more important purposes of the adoption of the code system of pleading, was to avoid as far as possible a multiplicity of suits, and to enable parties to determine their differences in one action. 'And to this end counterclaims were designed, not only to include recoupment and set-offs at common law, but to enlarge their scope, so that but few cases could arise in which all litigation between the parties to the action might not foe settled in the same suit.”
Also in Laney v. Ingalls, 5 S. D. 183, 186, 58 N. W. 572, followed in Driver v. Gillette, 43 S. D. 62, 177 N. W. 815, it was held that the promissory notes given were merely evidence of debt and that defendants were entitled to make the same defense or counterclaim as if the original contract, of which the promissory notes were the evidence, had been sued upon. In the Laney Case it was held that:
“As between the original parties, or those who stand in their place, it would be repulsive to our practice * * * tO' hold that a person sued on a promissory note given for the purchase price of personal property could not defend on the ground that there was a
But the case at bar presents facts different from those presented in the Laney Case, the McHard Case, the Port Huron Case, or the Advance Thresher Co. Case. The court expressly referred to the two last-named cases when, in Tuthill v. Sherman, 32 S. D. 103, 142 N. W. 257, 259, it said:
“In this state causes of action sounding in tort, and not connected with the subject of plaintiff’s cause of action, are not plead-able as counterclaims at all.”
In support of this it cited, among other authorities, Sutherland, Code PI. §§ 630-638. At section 634, p. 380, the learned author says: “The connection of the cause, of action asserted in the counterclaim and1 the subject of- the action must be immediate and direct and such as may be assumed to have been contemplated by the parties in their dealings with each other.” Among the citations in support of the text is Braithwaite v. Aikin, 3 N. D. 365, 56 N. W. 133, a case not unlike the case at bar.
In the case at bar defendant is sued on promissory notes. By way of counterclaim, he asks damages on account of alleged ■destruction of his business reputation and credit. He states in his pleading that his cause of counterclaim is connected with plaintiff’s ■cause of action. He attempts — not without some appearance of success — to show this connection by allegation of facts. Assuming that the destruction of defendant’s line of credit and business reputation are sufficiently alleged as flowing from plaintiff’s conversion of defendant’s property, that cause of action is not so connected with the subject of plaintiff’s action as to make it a proper counterclaim thereto. Tuthill v. Sherman, supra; Sutherland Code PI. § 634, p. 380; Braithwaite v. Aikin, supra. The demurrers should have been sustained. The orders appealed from are reversed.