99 Iowa 135 | Iowa | 1896
The material facts involved in this case appear to be substantially as follows: At some time prior to the year 1889, Gr. S. Mann recovered judgment in the district court of Clay county against A. D. Taylor. An appeal from the judgment was taken by Taylor, and a supersedeas bond, with the defendant as a surety, was filed. To indemnify the defendant against loss by reason of his signing the bond, Taylor gave to him a bill of sale of several horses and colts, two carriages, and two sets of harness, and delivered to him nearly, if not quite, all the property therein described. Taylor died in July, 1889, and in October of the same year, this court reversed the judgment from which the appeal was taken, and the defendant was thereby released from further liability on the bond. 78 Iowa, 355 (43 N. W. Rep. 220). When the bill of sale was given, the defendant gave to Taylor a receipt, which provided, in effect, that, when the liability of the defendant should be at an end, he should re-convey to Taylor the property included in the bill of sale, after deducting therefrom the expense of keeping it. The plaintiff is administrator of the estate of Taylor. ITis petition shows the facts stated, and alleges that he has demanded of the defendant the return of the property, and has offered to pay him the reasonable expense of keeping it, but that the defendant has refused to comply with the demand thus made. Judgment for the value of the property is demanded. The answer of the defendant contains a general denial, but admits substantially all the averments of the petition, excepting the alleged conversion, and avers that he never received one pony, one carriage, and a harness described in his receipt. The answer also contains a counter-claim, in which the defendant alleges: That on the seventeenth day of September, 1888, Taylor made and delivered to him a
The action was properly commenced by ordinary proceedings. No equitable relief was demanded by the petition. The defendant, in his counter-claim, tendered equitable issues, and demanded relief, which could only have been granted by a court of equity. The case was thus brought within the purview of section 2517 of the Code, which contains the following: “Where the action has been properly commenced by ordinary proceedings, either party shall have the right, by motion, to have any issue heretofore exclusively cognizable in equity, tried in the manner hereinafter prescribed in cases of equitable proceedings. * * *” Under this provision, the issues presented by the counter-claim, were properlyotriable, as in equity, by the court, without a jury (Code, section 2740); and the court correctly sustained the motion, so far as it required those issues to be so tried. No objection was made to the ruling which transferred the entire cause to the equity docket.
So much of the cause as embraced the issues tendered by the counter-claim having been properly assigned for trial as in equity, did the concession of the plaintiff that, if the note and the stipulation indorsed thereon were proved to be valid, then they gave to the defendant a lien upon seven horses for the payment of the note, authorize the court to require a trial of the remaining issues by jury? We think not. A court of law could not have granted the relief to
This conclusion disposes of the controlling questions in the case, and makes a decision of other questions discussed, unnecessary. The decree of the district court is reversed. •