96 Wis. 473 | Wis. | 1897
This action was brought to recover dam•ages for assault and battery alleged to have been committed upon the plaintiff by the defendant, June 15, 1896, and the complaint simply sets forth that cause of action and demands judgment for the damages claimed. After alleging that, just before the assault mentioned in the complaint, the plaintiff assaulted the defendant, the answer, by way of counterclaim, alleges, in effect, that June 15, 1896, the. plaintiff, with.force and arms, unlawfully and maliciously made ■an assault upon the defendant, and, did beat, bruise, pound, ■and ill-treat him, so as to cause him to be sick, sore, and lame, and inflicted great suffering upon him, to his damage in the sum of $1,000, and that during the affray the defendant, in the necessary defense of his own person, struck
Eliminating from our statutes what is inapplicable to the •case at bar, and they provide, in effect, that an answer .may contain “ a statement of any new matter constituting a .. . . counterclaim ... in favor of a defendant and .against a plaintiff, between whom a several judgment might ■be had in the action, and arising out of ... a cause of ■action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint, as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or connected with the sxdject of the action.” R. S. secs. 2655, 2656. Counsel contends that the word “ transaction ” should be construed to apply only to such transactions “ as are in .the nature of contracts,” if not strictly contracts. But the manifest purpose of the statute was to allow parties to the .same suit to settle in such suit, as far as convenient and .practicable, all controversies arising out of the same contract ■or transaction set forth in the complaint, or connected with ,the subject of the action. Such is, in effect, the construction which this court has repeatedly put upon the statutes. Vilas v. Mason, 25 Wis. 310; McArthur v. Green Bay & M. Canal Co. 34 Wis. 139; Gilbert v. Loberg, 86 Wis. 661; Collins v. Morrison, 91 Wis. 324. The provisions of the statutes quoted manifestly do not limit counterclaims to causes of action .arising out of contracts or transactions in the nature of contracts. If additional authorities are wnnted in support of this proposition, they can be found in the brief of the learned •counsel for the defendant. We must hold that the counterclaim was properly pleaded in this action.
By the Cmort.— The order of the circuit court is affirmed.