80 Ky. 371 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
Hampton, as the assignee of a firm of bankers, doing business under the firm name of Wilson, Andrews & Co., •in conjunction with the firm, instituted this action in equity, -seeking to recover of the appellant Meek a balance of over . $3,000, alleged to be due the bank by reason of overdrafts by the appellant.
He also alleged that the appellant was indebted to-that -firm by reason of three several notes executed by the appel1 lant to third parties, and by them assigned to the bank, and asked judgment thereon.
It was further alleged, that to secure the payment of ■what the appellant might be owing the bank, he had deposited several notes on third parties, to be., held as collateral •security. These notes are set forth, and proceedings were ■ or had been instituted for their collection.
A motion was made by the appellant to require the appellee to paragraph his petition, and this was overruled. Why this was done is not made to appear, as the Code expressly • provides: “If there be more than one cause of action, each must be distinctly stated in a separate numbered para•graph.” (Subsection 3 of section 113, Civil Code.)
Here were several causes of action, and each cause of • action should have been numbered to enable the appellant to respond.
The motion requiring the appellee to elect was properly < overruled, as he hád the right to prosecute either or all the • ■causes of action in the same petition. The most serious '■objection to the judgment complained of consists in the rxefusal of the court to transfer the legal issues to the ordinary docket, or to permit the trial of these issues by a jury. 'Section 12 of title 2, Civil Code, provides: “In an equit-
Although an attachment was obtained by the appellee, the claims upon' which the recovery was sought were purely legal, except so much of the petition as-, sought to subject, the collateral securities to the payment of the debts. The one was an action for a balance due on an account, with a bill of particulars given; the other was an action on the ■ three notes for the recovery of .certain-sums of money that. the appellant had promised to pay.
• To the petition the appellant filed an answer which is, in-, effect, a plea of payment and set-off to appellee’s demand, and further denying the deposit by him- with the bank of the other notes as collateral security, but alleging that these notes were'placed by him in his private box in the bank for-safe-keeping'only. • ...
The issues were plainly presented, and .when the motion to transfer to the ordinary docket was made, the court very properly directed a trial by jury, of the .legal issues. There was-then a change'of venue, and .the judge trying, the case set. aside-the order directing the jury to. try the case, against'theobjectio'ns-of the appellant, and proceeded to hear the case: upon the commissioner’s report and other proof as to the state ■ of-.the accounts. T^P bill of evidence is not'ip. the-recordy..
It is said, however, that the accounts are complicated, and a jury could not intelligently determine the issues made. No such allegation is made; and if there had been such a state of pleading, we cannot well see why a jury, with a bill of particulars containing each item of debt and credit, with the balance struck, could not understand and pass upon the questions made. In fact, the legal issues should have been first determined; that is, the amount of indebtedness ascertained, and then the collaterals, if any deposited, could be subjected by the chancellor to the payment of the debts. The disposition of the equitable branch of the case was. dependent on the résult of the legal issues, and therefore the latter should have been first disposed of. It is. true that section 12'says that if the action is properly commenced in equity, any issue made, in which the party is entitled to a. jury trial, shall be transferred to the ordinary docket, but either party may require the equitable issue disposed of before the transfer. This section of course cannot apply when the exercise of equity jurisdiction is made to depend on the result of the legal issues; and this action is in fact, so. far as the account and notes are concerned, an action ordinary with an attachment — the legal issues to be tried by a jury, and the issues made by the attachment by the court. It results, therefore, that the appellant was entitled to a trial
The other branch of the case remains to be considered. During the progress of the trial one McCall filed a petition asking to be. made a party to the action, by the appellee alleging that he was a partner of Meek, the appellant, and as such entitled to an interest in the notes alleged to have been deposited with the bank. He was made a party, and his petition taken as his answer in the case. In this petition his prayer is: “ That a settlement be had between him and Meek of their partnership; that a judgment be rendered against the persons for the amount of the notes, the money collected, and that, so far as defendant is entitled,, that the same be paid over to him, and for all other proper relief.” The appellant was not made a defendant to McCall’s petition, but the case was referred to a commissioner to hear proof, and settle the partnership accounts, and upon the report of the commissioner a judgment was rendered in favor of McCall vs. Meek for over two thousand dollars. Before the submission of the cause, the appellant Meek offered to file an answer to the petition of McCall, denying the partnership or McCall’s alleged right to any part of the motes. The filing of this answer was refused. This was ¡error. Meek was not compelled to answer, as he had not been made a party to the petition; and while the case was properly sent to the commissioner as between the appellee and McCall to ascertain the extent of McCall’s interest, it was erroneous to require Meek to abide by the report, and to render a judgment for McCall when he was not a party, and when no judgment was even asked against him. The specific relief demanded by the petition was the interest of
The Code provides that the petition ‘ must demand the .•specific relief to which the plaintiff considers himself entitled ; and may contain a general prayer for any- other relief to which he may be entitled; but if no defense is made, the plaintiff cannot have judgment for any relief not specifically ■demanded.” (Section 90, chapter 2, Civil Code.)
It is doubtful under this prayer whether the appellant McCall is entitled to any judgment for balance due on settlement of partnership, and that his only judgment, in the -absence of a defense, should have been, if he was a partner, ,for one half the notes. If this view is to be regarded as technical, there is no reason for denying to the appellant the right to controvert the existence of the facts alleged by McCall in his petition.
He had not been made a party to it, and the court should have allowed the answer filed.
With this view of the questions arising on the two appeals, the judgment in each case must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.