Poston v. . Rose

87 N.C. 279 | N.C. | 1882

Various exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court during the progress of the cause, up to final judgment, by the appellant, which in the order of time we proceed to notice.

1. The first exception is to the submission of any issue in regard to the counter-claim, and the introduction of any evidence in its support, as not within the provisions of section 101 of the Code.

It is manifest the form of the action as tried before the justice, (281) and as understood by both parties, was upon contract, and the controversy was so to the validity and amount of the claims of each preferred against the other, and no objection was then made to the introduction and proof of the defendant's for the reason now assigned that it was inadmissible under the rules of the pleading.

It was certainly competent for the defendant to extinguish, by payment of proof of a counter-demand, the indebtedness due from the defendant, since the lien must be commensurate with the debt and will cease when it is discharged. It is not an action merely to recover the possession of the property to which the lien adheres, but to have the indebtedness ascertained and adjudged, and then to enforce its payment, if necessary by a sale of the property. In determining the amount of the claim so asserted, there is no reason why the defendant may not reduce the amount or discharge it by any proof pertinent thereto, or by effacing it altogether by a larger counter-demand.

It is true, in answer to the certiorari issued by order of the court, there has been sent up as found among the files a complaint appropriate to an action for the recovery of possession alone, but it is not recognized in the record and is at variance with the mode in which the proceedings have been conducted, and hence we cannot ascribe any legal effect to its presence, or allow it to control what was done in the court below. The justice pursuant to the statute (Bat. Rev., ch 63, sec. 57,) has made *225 "a return to the appellate court and filed with the clerk thereof the papers, proceedings and judgment in the cases," and until an amendment is allowed, this must be deemed the case constituted by the appeal, and to be there retried. If new amendments in the complaint, changing the nature of the matters in contest, or new and different defences are made after the removal, it must be with the approval of the court, and is not a matter of right to either. No such changes are shown by the record to have been asked or allowed, and therefore the trial (282) rightfully proceeded in the appellate court upon the issues tried in that of the justice. These exceptions are therefore overruled.

2. The defendant was entitled to claim for services rendered by his wife with his approval and her consent that he should have them.

3. The defence of the statute of limitations was not set up on the former trial to defeat the counter-claim, nor permitted to be added by his Honor, and hence it was unavailing. Hinton v. Deans, 75 N.C. 18.

We do not assent to a construction put by plaintiff's counsel on rule 1 of section 20, chapter 63, of Battle's Revisal, that inasmuch as the pleadings in a justice's court consist of the complaint and answer, of which a counter-claim forms part (rule 4), therefore any and all defences are open to a counter-claim in the appellate court, whether made in that of the justice or not, for such a practice would often thwart the course of justice and be a surprise for which the other party would not be prepare. While the pleadings need extend no further, the subject matter in contest should not be changed by the removal of the cause to another appellate tribunal; and without this interpretation, the act requiring the return of proceedings had before the justice for the information of the court above, would be meaningless.

We see no reason why, if the statutory bar was not relied on in the first trial it could not be set up without leave of the court in the second trial, as was decided in Hinton v. Deans, it is not equally inadmissible to set it up under like circumstances to defeat the counter-claim which is virtually a cross-action itself, with reversed relations of the parties.

4. The only remaining exception to be noticed is to the vagueness of the findings upon the opposing claims. These accounts are part of the record, and the verdict is rendered definite and certain by reference to them, and the rendition of the judgment only requires (283) the subtraction of the one from the other, and the ascertainment of the difference in their amounts. A verdict very similar was upheld in Ransom v. McClees, 64, N.C. 17, where the finding was "that one bond should off-set the other," which PEARSON, C. J., delivering the opinion, says, "was in substance a verdict for the defendant, and his Honor might well have instructed the clerk to so enter it." *226

The present finding is separately in favor of each of the rendered accounts filed, and which were in evidence before the jury, and there can be no uncertainty as to the sums intended.

No error. Affirmed.

Cited: Moore v. Garner, 109 N.C. 158; Lumber Co. v. McPherson, 133 N.C. 290; Dameron v. Carpenter, 190 N.C. 598.