after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the Court.
We differ with the Circuit' Court of Appeals in its' holding that, as brought in review before it, this cause was an action at law. We think the cause was then equitable and the proper review was by appeаl. The case began as an action at law for money had and received. When the defendant bank claimed to be only a stakeholder of the deposit, disclaimed interest therein аnd offered to pay it into court, and asked that the other claimants of the fund be made parties, its answer and cross petition became an equitable defense and a prayer fоr affirmative equitable relief in the nature of a bill for interpleader. Section 274b of the Judicial Code as amended by Act of March 3, 1915, c. 90, 38 Stat. 956, provides: '
“ That in all actions at law equitable defenses may be interposed by answer, plea, or replication without the necessity of filing a bill on the equity side of the court. The defendant shall have the same rights in such case as if he had filеd a bill embodying the defense of seeking the relief prayed, for in such answer or plea. Equitablerelief respecting the subject matter of the suit may thus be obtained by answer, or plea. • In case affirmative relief is prayed in such answer or plea, the plaintiff shall file a replication. Review of the, judgment or decree entered in such case shall be regulated by rule of сourt. Whether such review be sought by writ of error or by appeal the appellate court'-shall have full power to render such judgment upon the records as law and justice shall require.”
This section applies to the case before us. The proceeding was changed by defendant’s answer and cross petitiofrom one at law to one in equity, with all the consequencеs flowing therefrom. The better practice would perhaps have been, on the defendant’s filing its answer and cross petition, to order the cause transferred to the equity side of the cоurt. Under Equity Rule No. 22, a suit in equity which should have been brought at law must be transferred to- the law side of the court. There is no corresponding provision in rule or statute which expressly directs this to be done whеn the action begun at law should have been by a bill on the equity side, but we think the power of the trial court to order a transfer in a case like this is implied from the broad language of § 274b, above quoted, by which the defendant who files an equitable defense is to be given the same rights as if he had set them up in a bill in equity, and from § 274a of the Judicial Code, quoted below; in which the court is •directed, when a suit аt law should have been brought in equity, to order amendments 1o the pleadings necessary to conform them to the proper.practice.
Webb
v.
Southern Ry. Co.,
Section 274b is an important step toward a consolidation of the federal courts of law and equity and the questions presented in this uniоn are to be solved much as they have been under the state codes.
United States
v.
Richardson,
. Where an equitable defense is interposed to a suit at law, the equitable issue raised should first bе disposed of as in a court of equity, and then if an issue at law remains, it is triable to a jury.
Massie
v.
Stradford,
17 Oh. St. 596;
Dodsworth
v.
Hopple,
33 Oh. St. 16, 18;
Taylor
v.
Standard Brick Co.,
66 Oh. St. 360, 366; Sutherland Code Pl. and Pr. § 1157. The equitable defense makes the issue
Congress, we think, was looking toward such a union of law and equity actions in the enactment of § 274b, quoted above, and of § 274a, which, referring to courts of the United Stаtes, provides:
“ That in case any of said courts shall find that a suit at law should have been brought in equity or a suit in equity .should have been brought at law, the court shall order any amendments to the pleadings whiсh may be necessary to ponform them to the proper practice. Any party to the suit sháll have the right, at any stage -of the cause, to amend his pleadings so as to obviate the оbjection that his suit was not brought on the right side of the court. The cause shall proceed and be determined upon such amended pleadings. All testimony taken before such amendment, if presеrved, shall stand as testimony in the cause with like effect as if the pleadings had been originally in the amended form.”
To be sure, these sections do not .create one form of civil action as do the codes of procedure in the States, but they
Coming now to apply those two sections thus construed to the case before us, we find that by dеfendant’s answer and the court’s order it became a bill of interpleader in equity. Thereafter the proceedings should have been so treated, both in the trial and appellate courts. The chancellor having sustained a bill of interpleader, disposed of th'e controversy between the claimants by directing.any ■method of trial which would best and expeditiously accоmplish justice in the particular case.
State Insurance Co. v. Gennett,
2 Tenn. Ch. 100, 101;
Rowe
v.
Hoagland’s Administrators,
7 N. J. Eq. 131;
Condict’s Executors
v.
King,
13 N. J. Eq. 375, 383;
City Bank
v.
Bangs,
2 Paige, Ch. R. 570, 573;
Gibson
v.
Goldthwaite,
It was,, therefore, error by the Circuit Court of Appeals to proceеd as if it were reviewing a' judgment in a suit at law upon a bill of exceptions. It is true that the record-contained a bill of exceptions, but there was also a transcript of the same evidence certified as required
On this review by certiorari, we could consider and decide the issue which the Circuit Court of Appeаls erroneously refused to consider. On such an issue alone, however, we would not have granted the writ, because except for the important question of practice the case was not of sufficient public interest to .justify it. We think it better, therefore, to reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals and to remand the case to that court for consideration and decision of the-issues of fact and law in this case as on an appeal in equity.
Reversed.
