57 Ind. 584 | Ind. | 1877
The appellant, as plaintiff, sued the appellee, as defendant, in this action, in the court below.
In her complaint, the appellant alleged, in substance, that her husband, "William J. Manchester, held two notes executed by the appellee, to E. F. Dodge, Guardian, dated April 8th, 1867, for the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars each, one due in three and the other in six years from date, each drawing interest from two years after date, and waiving valuation and' appraisement laws, and payable at the First Rational Bank of Goshen, Indiana ; that said two notes were received by her husband, as appellant’s agent; that on the 2d day of January, 1872, her said husband, by the name of John Manchester, recovered a judgment in the court of common pleas of Elkhart county, against the appellee for six hundred and forty dollars- and twenty cents, and costs, on the first of said two>
To this complaint the appellee answered, in substance, that he admitted the execution of the notes dated April 8th, 1867, as alleged in the complaint, but he averred that the same had been, and were, long prior to the alleged compromise and composition, fully paid, satisfied and discharged.
And, in the second paragraph of his answer, the appellee alleged, in substance, that he admitted the execution of said notes dated April 8th, 1867, but he averred, that the appellant ought not to recover in this action, because he said that said notes were secured by a mortgage executed by him, at the same date, upon his interest in certain real estate, a copy of which was filed with said paragraph, the appellee at the time being the owner of an interest in said real estate, as the heir at law of-Dodge, deceased; that afterward, on the 28th day of April, 1867, the appellee by deed, without warranty, a copy of which was therewith filed, conveyed his interest in, and delivered, said real estate so mortgaged to the appellant, who had knowledge of said mortgage which was then upon record, and who, with her husband, said "William J. Manchester, thereafter executed a warranty mortgage upon all said lands to the appellee and others to secure the payment of a debt of three thousand five hundred dollars, as therein stated, a copy of which mortgage was therewith filed ; that thereafter, the payees of said debt and mortgage sold and assigned the same to Alexander Pope, who thereafter, at the March term, 1870, of the court below, sued the appellant and her said husband upon said debt, and foreclosed the said mortgage against them, and such proceedings were therein had .as that a decree of foreclosure was duly entered
To this answer, the appellant replied in two paragraphs, .as follows:
1. A general denial; and,
2. The appellant admitted, that the appellee executed “the notes and mortgage mentioned in said answer, and that appellee was the owner of the real estate mentioned in said mortgage; and that the appellee, on the 28th day
And the action, being at issue, was submitted to the court below for trial, upon an agreed statement of facts; and the court found for the appellee, “ to which conclusion of law from said facts ” the appellant excepted.
And judgment was rendered by the court below, upon its finding, for the appellee, from which judgment this appeal is now prosecuted.
In this • court, the only alleged error assigned by the appellant is, that the court below erred in its conclusion of law upon the agreed statement of facts.
To the proper consideration of the questions presented by this alleged error, a summary at least of this agreed statement of facts is almost indispensable; and we therefore give this summary, making it as brief as we can, with the view, at the same time, of making it intelligible.
“It is admitted,” that the appellee executed the two notes of five hundred and fifty dollars each, dated April 8th,
“ It is agreed, that if, upon the above facts and evidence, said notes of April 8th, 1867, became an equitable charge on said lands, to be charged on them before resorting to defendant, either in the hands of plaintiff or said Pope, the defendant should recover; if, on the contrary, they did not become a charge on said land, and not paid in' contemplation of law by said transfer and mortgage, the plaintiff' is entitled to recover the face of said notes and interest, less a payment of eight hundred dollars, made April 17th, 1873.”
It appears from a bill of exceptions which is properly in the record, that this cause was submitted to the court below for trial, not alone upon the “ agreed statement of facts,” but also upon what is termed “ documentary evidence,” referred to therein.
The case, as presented by the record, is rather an anomalous one. It is not an agreed case under our code of practice, for it does not “appear by affidavit that the controversy is real, and the proceedings m good faith, to determine the rights of the parties.” 2 R. S. 1876, p. 190, sec. 386.
In the case of Sharpe v. Sharpe’s Adm’r, 27 Ind. 507, it was held by this court, that such an affidavit was necessary to give the court jurisdiction of the case. And, indeed, it could not well be held otherwise, for the language used in section 386, supra, is imperative. “ It must appear by affidavit that the controversy is real, and the proceedings in good faith, to determine the rights of the parties.”
Now, if we consider what is termed an agreed statement of facts as merely an agreed summary of the facts which the evidence would have established on a trial of the issues joined between the parties; if, in other words, we consider that the issues in this cause were submitted to the court below for trial, upon the evidence contained in
Appellant’s cause of action, as stated m her complaint, is the alleged false and fraudulent representations of the appellee, whereby the appellant was induced to compound and compromise the appellee’s two notes of April 8th, 1867. Appellant has sued for damages resulting from these alleged representations, and for exemplary damages. She has not sued upon the notes, nor has she sought to have the alleged compromise of the notes set aside or declared null and void. But the gist of her complaint in this cause is, as before stated, the alleged false and fraudulent representations of the appellee, the damages she has sustained thereby, and the exemplary damages, for the recovery of which she has demanded judgment.
Very singularly, as it seems to us, the appellee’s answer in this action is not responsive to the appellant’s complaint.
The first paragraph of this answer is a general plea of payment of the notes of April 8th, 1867, long prior to the alleged composition and compromise; and the second paragraph of the answer, as we view it, is a special plea of payment, giving in detail the circumstances of such payment. But in neither paragraph of his answer was there even the slightest allusion by the appellee to the alleged false and fraudulent representations, wherewith he was charged by appellant, and which constituted the gravamen of her complaint.
It is evident, therefore, that, for some reason which is not clearly apparent, the appellee chose to consider the appellant’s complaint in this action as a complaint on the two notes of April 8th, 1867, and answered it accordingly.
Now, if we consider the agreed statement of facts in this case as merely an agreed statement of the evidence on which this cause and the issues joined therein were
It would seem, that when this agreed statement was prepared, the parties had either forgotten what the appellant had sued for in this action, ór else they then and thereby intended to submit to the court below for trial a cause of action entirely different from the one stated in appellant’s complaint.
We incline to the opinion, that the parties did intend, by their agreed statement of facts, to submit to the court for trial a different cause of action from the one stated in appellant’s complaint; and, if this statement had been accompanied by the affidavit required by section 386 of the practice act, supra, we might perhaps have considered it as a new and independent action.
As we can not, however, regard this as an agreed case, under our code, we have looked at it in what we consider the most favorable light for the appellant, and, viewed in this light, we are constrained to say, that, in our opinion, the court below did not err in the decision of this cause. For there was not a single item of fact or evidence adduced before the court below which tended, even remotely, to sustain the material averments of the appellant’s complaint.
"We have hitherto considered this case as if the alleged error assigned by the appellant fairly presented the questions before us; but this may well be doubted. It is true, that in an agreed case, properly prepared and submitted, under the requirements of section 386 of our practice act,
Our conclusion in this case is, that there is no available error in the record, of which the appellant .can complain.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed, at the appellant’s costs.