4 S.D. 226 | S.D. | 1893
Historically this case is as follows. The appellant, as plaintiff, commenced an action against respondents, as defendants, to recover the amount paid by it to defendants as the purchase money of a number of warrants purporting to nave been issued by Douglas county, upon the ground that, in said sale, defendants warranted the same to be the warrants of and binding on, said county, according to their purport, while in fact they were not the warrants of the county; that, at the time of their issuance, Douglas county was not organized, and has ever since its organization refused to recognize or pay the same; and that they were issued fraudulently, and without consideration. Except as to the corporate and partnership character of the parties, respectively, defendants’ answer denied each and every allegation of the complaint By agreement the case was sent to a referee ‘ ‘to hear the testimony and report, as provided by the statutes of this territory.” Upon the filing of the referee’s report the plaintiff moved the court, “upon the findings in this action, evidence taken thereon, report of the referee, and all proceedings had, ” for judgment against defend
Appellant contends that its complaint sets up a good cause of action for breach of defendants’ warranty, under which the warrants in question were sold; that, by the complaint and answer, distinct issues were raised, not only as to the legality of the county organization by which the warrants purported to have been issued, but as to the validity and binding force of the warrants themselves, — it being alleged in thq complaint, and denied in the answer, that they were issued fraudulently and without consideration; that, upon the facts found and reported by the-referee, this court held, reversing the trial court, that the county organization was defacto, thus making the warrants prima facie good, but that the referee entirely failed to to make any finding upon the question whether or not the warrants were issued upon or without consideration, and that it is still entitled to have that question tried as a material issue in the case. Its objection is not that the judgment appealed from is inconsistent with, or unsupported by, the findings returned, but that other findings should have been made. To sustain the
The doctrine of these cases seems to us reasonable. Where, upon the coming in of a referee’s report, the trial court is allowed to render judgment thereon, without any suggestion from either side that material issues are ignored in the findings and the judgment rendered by the court is consistent with, and sustained by, the findings returned, it is not ground for reversal of such judgment that an issue presented by the pleadings was