67 P. 421 | Idaho | 1901
— This action was brought, under the provisions of section 3396 of the Revised Statutes, to contest the respondents’ rights to foreclose a chattel mortgage, and to contest the amount claimed to be due thereon.
The facts out of which it arose are substantially as follows: "Russell & Co., of Massilon, Ohio, manufacturers and dealers in threshing machinery, had a local agency at Lewiston, Idaho, and through their agent there sold to the appellant a threshing outfit, consisting of a separator, wind-stacker, an engine, beltings, trucks, tanks, Jackson feeder, Jackson blocks, Cyclone auger-bagger, truck, and stacker, and all fixtures making a complete threshing outfit. All of this property was delivered
Said warranty contains, among others, the following provisions: That all of the articles sold were of Russell & Co.’s manufacture, and with proper management capable of doing as good work as similar articles of other manufacturers, and it was also agreed, as a condition of said warranty, that the cylinder of said thresher should run at a minimum speed of one thousand revolutions, and not exceeding twelve hundred per minute. The contract remedy is stated as follows: “If said machinery, or any part thereof, shall fail to fill this warranty, written notice shall Ibe given to Russell & Co., Massilon, Ohio, and the party through whom the machinery was purchased, stating wherein it fails to fill the warranty, and time, opportunity, and friendly assistance given to reach the machinery and remedy any defects. If the defective machinery cannot then be made to fill the warranty, it shall be returned to the undersigned, to the place where received, and another furnished on the same terms of the warranty, or money and notes to the amount represented by the defective machinery shall be returned, and no further claim made on Russell & Co. Defects or failure in one part shall not condemn or be grounds for claiming renewal or for the return of any other part.” The contract also contains the following clause: “Continued possession or use of the machinery for "six days shall be conclusive evidence that the warranty is fulfilled to the full satisfaction of the undersigned, who agrees thereafter to make no further claim on Russell & Co. under the warranty.” Said personal property was paid for by promissory notes, secured by two mortgages, one on real estate, and the other on said threshing outfit. The property was delivered to the appellant on the fourteenth day of July, 1900. On the thirty-first day of July, 1900, the respondent Russell & Co. began foreclosure proceedings for the purpose of foreclosing said chattel mortgage, before the sheriff of Nez Perces county, Idaho, by virtue of the following provision contained in said chattel mortgage, to wit: “It is
Said machinery had been in the possession of appellant from July 14, 1900, to July 31, 1900. On the latter date foreclosure- proceedings were instituted, through the sheriff, the respondents claiming that said promissory note had become due by the happening of the events above mentioned in said mortgage, which events are set up in the affidavit instituting such proceedings, and are as follows, to wit: “1. The said mortgagor has abandoned the machinery described in said mortgage to the elements, and has publicly stated that he would have nothing whatever to do with it, and threatens to and has left the same to be damaged and ruined by the elements. 2. That said machinery has been left absolutely without any protection whatever, and that the movable parts thereof are in great danger of being stolen or carried away, and the material value of such machinery thereby diminished, and its market value greatly deteriorated. 3. That he has not taken proper or any use or care thereof, and that by the misuse of the same to which he has subjected it the said machinery has been broken in parts, bolts have become loose, belts become loose, the belts thereon were improperly sewed, and by the loosening of the belts and bolts, and the lack of knowledge in handling the same, the working parts of the machine have been greatly and largely damaged and injured. 4. The said mortgagor has improperly used said threshing
The affidavit referred to was delivered to the sheriff, and the-foreclosure of said chattel mortgage thereunder began. After the required affidavit and notice of foreclosure had been served; upon the appellant, he served written notice of disclaimer in and to said threshing outfit and machinery upon the sheriff,, and notified him to turn the said property over to Russell & Co., claiming therein that he (the appellant) rescinded the-sale aforesaid. Thereafter, on August 2, 1900, appellant instituted this action for the purpose of contesting the right of the mortgagee to foreclose said mortgage and to contest the-amount due thereon.
The complaint contained two causes of relief, which were-in the nature of a release by rescission. Thereafter, a demurrer having been sustained thereto, the complaint was amended,, setting forth three causes of action — one for general equitable-relief, and two for damages. The equitable relief was asked,, first, bj'' way of rescission, and then the amended complaint again sought rescission as a specific remedy. To this complaint respondents demurred, and thereafter answered and filed a cross-complaint, and thereafter by leave of court withdrew the answer and cross-complaint, and filed a motion to strike and also filed an amended demurrer. Respondents also filed
Considerable stress by respective counsel is laid upon the construction of the provisions of the contract of sale above quoted, and it is necessary, at the outset, to determine the proper construction of those provisions in order to properly decide some, if not all, of the errors assigned. The contract is one of sale and warranty on the part of the respondents, and contains stipulations and promises on the part of the appellant, and under that contract their rights must be determined. That part of the contract which has been largely dwelt upon in argument by respective counsel is as follows: “Continued possession or use of the machinery for six (6) days shall be conclusive evidence that the warranty is fulfilled to the full satisfaction of the undersigned [the appellant], who agrees thereafter to make no further claim on Russell & Co. under the warranty.” It is also agreed as follows: “If said ma
By the agreement of the appellant above quoted, he had but six days after taldng possession of said machinery in which to test the same, and serve written notice on Bussell & Co., of any defects that the machinery contained, and if he failed to do so he agreed thereafter to make no further claim on Bussell & Co. under the warranty contained in said contract of sale.
With this interpretation or construction of said quoted clauses of the contract, we shall proceed to apply it to the complaint of the appellant and to the contentions of respective counsel on this appeal.
The court permitted counsel for respondents to withdraw his answer to the amended complaint, and file an amended demurrer. That action of the court is assigned as error. It appears that counsel for respondents demurred to the amended complaint, and the demurrer was overruled. Thereupon an answer and cross-complaint was filed. Thereafter counsel for respondents made application to the court to withdraw the answer and cross-complaint, and for leave to file an amended demurrer, which application was granted, and the answer and
It is not competent for a party to interpose different demurrers to the same pleading, except by permission of the court; and where no objection is taken on either of the grounds enumerated in section 4174 of the Revised Statutes, either by demurrer or answer, the defendant must be deemed to have waived the same, excepting only the objection to the jurisdiction of the court, and the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. (Rev. Stats., see. 41-78.) A very large discretionary power is vested in the trial court- by the provisions of section 4229 of the Revised Statutes. Its provisions are broad enough to authorize the court to permit the withdrawal of an answer and cross-complaint, and to file an amended demurrer to the complaint.
The second error assigned is the overruling of appellant’s motion to compel Russell & Co. to file the original affidavit in the chattel mortgage foreclosure proceedings, or to compel it to file a complaint setting up the right to a deficiency judgment, and facts showing the right to foreclosure of the chattel' mortgage before the sheriff. This assignment involves the proper procedure in an action of this kind. Section 3397 of the Revised Statutes provides that the right of the mortgagee to foreclosure, as well as the amount claimed to be due, may be contested in the district court by any person interested in
Sustaining respondents’ motion to compel the appellant to elect between the remedies of rescission and breach of warranty is the second error assigned. Belief is sought by the third count of the complaint on the ground of rescission of the contract, and by the fifth count relief is sought by way of damages for breach of said contract, and it is contended that said causes of action are inconsistent with each other, and for that reason-the action of the court in compelling appellant to elect on which of said inconsistent causes of action he would proceed to trial was error. Under the provisions of section 4187 of the Bevised Statutes, the defendant is permitted to set forth in his answer as many defenses and counterclaims as he may have, and to a certain extent those defenses may be inconsistent with each other, but such defenses must not be so inconsistent that the proof of one defense would necessarily disprove the other. (Hollenbeck v. Clow, 9 How. Pr. 289. See, also, Baumgartner v. Vollmer, 5 Idaho, 340, 49 Pac. 729.) In Caldwell v. Ruddy, 2 Idaho, 1, 1 Pac. 339, by our territorial supreme court it was held that objection to an answer that it contains inconsistent defenses cannot be made by demurrer, but may by motion to strike! out or to require defendant to elect upon which he will stand. It is held in Bell v. Brown, 22 Cal. 671, that several defenses, inconsistent with each other, may, under proper circumstances, be set up in a verified answer, and, where the inconsistency arises by implication of law, being in the nature of pleas of confession and avoidance, as distinguished from denials; as, for instance, such defenses as setoff, counterclaim, discharge in insolvency, or bankruptcy, the statute of limitations, etc., in which matters in avoidance of the plaintiff’s claim are set up, may be pleaded as separate defenses, but defenses that are so inconsistent with each other that the proof of one will necessarily disprove the other cannot be set up in the same pleading. The proof of rescission would necessarily disprove any and all damages for the breach of the contract and vice versa.
Under the provisions of subdivision 2, section 4168, of the Revised Statutes, the complaint, whether in actions at law or suits in equity, must contain a statement of the facts in ordinary and concise language; and section 1, article 5, of the constitution of Idaho, provides that the distinctions between
As the record contains no prejudicial error, the judgment must be affirmed, with costs in favor of respondents.