77 N.W. 1012 | N.D. | 1898
The complaint in this case in substance alleges that for some time prior to January 5, 1895, the plaintiff was the owner in fee of a certain 160 acres of land situate in Walsh county (particularly describing it) ; that said land was incumbered by several liens created by "his grantor, one -of which; being a mortgage to one W. R. Shepard, had been foreclosed by a sale of the land, and a sheriff’s certificate of sale issued to said Shepard at the date of such sale, to-wit: December 30, 1893; that in March thereafter the certificate of sale was assigned to the defendant, James Garbutt;
The motion was based entirely upon errors of law, only one of which will be referred to. The Court, in its order granting the motion, used this language: “The decision of the Court herein is based solely upon the first ground specified in defendant’s motion, to-wit: that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” The abstract discloses that in fact this objection adopted by the Court as the basis of its order was made at the opening of the trial, in the form of an objection to the introduction of any testimony in the case, and after the impaneling of a jury. Treating the objection as directed to the sufficiency of the complaint to state a cause of action generally, it was not good, as we shall hereafter notice. Considering it, however, as assailing the complaint as not stating facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action at law, and bearing in mind that when made the trial was actually pro
No case has been found wherein an action at law has been maintained under the state of facts here existing. It is urged, however, that the fact that the remedy at law has not been resorted To by suitors is by no means conclusive on the question as to whether or not it should be accorded in this case. That is true. But we are clear that to hold that an action at law may be maintained upon the state of facts which here exists would be subversive of the fundamental principles which distinguish courts of law and courts of equity and their remedies. This court cannot lend its sanction to the recognition of a remedy at law where the remedy at equity is ample, long established, and by usage exclusive, particularly where the subject matter, as in this case, is so peculiarly the subject of equity jurisdiction. It may be urged that technically the objection made to the admission of evidence which the Court used as the basis of his order granting the new trial was not broad enough to raise the question as we have discussed it. We think that it was. Regardless of this, however, we are of the opinion that when the records of a case show that a case exclusively of equity jurisdiction has been tried as an action at law, and to a jury, and that a new trial had been granted by the trial court, this Court would sustain the order of the trial court setting aside the verdict and granting a new trail, regardless of the fact that neither party had made objections to such method of trial. Having reached the conclusion that the facts of this case make it one solely of equitable cognizance, the duty then fell upon the trial judge to find the facts himself. The verdict of a jury or findings of a referee would be simply advisory, and entirely subject to his control. See Rev. Codes, § § 5420,- 5460; also, Lawson, Rights, Rem. & Prac. § 3414. In Milk v. Moore, 39 Ill. 584, the Court said: “The chancellor is the sole judge of the evidence and its weight; and even when he directs