4 Ind. 585 | Ind. | 1853
Bill by Harper against Rankin for the foreclosure of a mortgage. Rankin answered setting forth that the mortgage was given to secure the payment of the last instalment of the purchase-money for the land embraced by it; that the purchase was made by him of Harper, on the representations of the latter as to quantity, quality, &c.; that the representations were false, and that he was entitled to a large deduction, one equal to the balance due, from the agreed price, &c.
The plaintiff replied by way of a plea to this answer, that on the 5th day of April, 1847, the said defendant commenced an action at law against the plaintiff to recover damages for the identical misrepresentations, &c., set up in his answer to the bill in this case, which action was still pending, &c.
Depositions were on file, and the whole cause seems to have been referred to the Court upon the plea, as it may be called, to the answer. The Court seems to have sustained the plea, excluded the defence set up in the answer, and decreed for the plaintiff the amount of his demand.
This was right. A defendant may elect between claiming a set-off or recoupment in an action brought against him, and bringing a cross action for his demand. He is bound by his election, at least till he shall abandon it by dismissing his first suit. Here he elected to bring a cross action, and adhered to it by continuing that action.
In Sherwood v. Hammond, 4 Blackf. 504, wherein the defendant sought to set up in defence a claim for which he had brought a cross action, the Court say:
“ Hammond, by attempting to set off his account against the demand of Sherwood before the justice, became a quasi plaintiff; and we must view the question in the same light as if he had brought two actions in the Circuit Court [to which the cause before the justice had been appealed] for the same cause. The pendency of that which was first commenced might have been pleaded in abatement of the other; but not e converso.”
This is in point.
We have no doubt, on the evidence, that Rankin is entitled to redress against Harper, but he must seek and doubtless will obtain it, through the channel he selected first, viz., his suit at law.
The judgment is affirmed, with 1 per cent, damages and costs.