156 Ind. 77 | Ind. | 1901
This was a proceeding under the statute for the review of a judgment. §§627-632 Burns 1891, inclusive. Three of the defendants below appeared, and separately demurred to the complaint for want of facts, and because two separate causes of action were improperly joined. The demurrers were sustained, and judgment was rendered against the plaintiff below. Error is assigned upon these rulings.
The complaint (title omitted) is in these words: “John E. Murphy, plaintiff, complains of William T. Branaman, administrator de bonis non of the estate of George H. Murphy, deceased, with the will annexed, James B. Murphy, Charles W. Murphy, Catharine Murphy, Charles E. Murphy, Edward Murphy, Bruce Murphy, Catharine Robertson, Laura Hays, Blanche Patrick, Frank Murphy, James Blaine Murphy, Hayden Murphy, Sylvia Murphy, Laura Hill, George E. Gibson, Mary Hazen, Nancy Wilson, Nelly Murphy, and Louis Schneck, defendants, and says: That, at the August term, 1898, of the Jackson Circuit Court, there was a cause pending .in said court for the construction of the last will and testament of George H. Mur
In such a complaint the rules of good pleading require that all the facts relied upon as entitling the party to relief should be averred, and particularly set forth in the complaint, with accuracy and clearness, so that without resort to the exhibits filed the court may haye before it a full and complete statement of the case. If pleadings, proceedings, or entries are referred to, while they need not be set out in haec verba, yet the substance of such portions of them as are necessary to a right understanding of the real matters of the complaint should be incorporated in that pleading. A complaint to review a judgment is not- founded upon the proceedings and judgment sought to be reviewed, and copies of such proceedings and judgment filed with the complaint cannot supply omissions of necessary allegations of their contents in the complaint itself.
The rule, of pleading is very plainly stated in Jamison v. Lake Erie, etc., R. Co., supra, from which we quote: “Even if it is sufficient to file a copy of the record sought to be. reviewed as an exhibit, it would seem, under our. practice, that the facts stated in a complaint for review for error of law should be sufficient to withstand a demurrer ■ without resorting to the transcript filed therewith. In actions brought for a new trial on account of newly discovered evidence, the rule is that the pleading and evidence in the original case, and the newly discovered evidence may be filed with the complaint as an exhibit. Yet, in such cases,
Such a suit is governed, in many respects, by the rules of procedure which are applied to appeals. Tf the action of the court is assailed on the ground that errors of law were committed, it must appear that proper exceptions were reserved, and that the necessary steps were taken, by way of motion or otherwise, to enable the party complaining to present such supposed erroneous rulings for review.
Tested by these rules, the complaint before us cannot be sustained. It contains, at best, a mere skeleton or outline of the matters relied upon, and attempts to supply nearly all of the averments necessary to present the supposed errors by reference to exhibits alleged to contain the proceedings and evidence in the original case. It cannot be ascertained from the averments of the complaint what the provisions of the will of George H. Murphy were, what interest the ap
It is unnecessary for us to examine the second cause of demurrer, viz., that two separate causes of action were improperly joined in the complaint, as no error committed in sustaining a demurrér for that reason is ground for a reversal of the judgment. §344 Burns 1894.
Judgment affirmed.