Recent practice and case law has inclined toward denying a request for trial by jury whenever a complaint joins claims in law and equity on the theory that any claim in equity "draws the whole lawsuit into equity." We think this narrows the right to trial by jury as guaranteed by the Indiana Constitution.
Facts and Procedural History
Appellant Stephen A. Songer is chairman of the board and chief executive officer of CentreBank of Veedersburg (Cen-treBank). He and his wife Jahn own about one-third of CentreBank's stock. Songer and Jahn also serve as directors and sole shareholders of Country Concrete, Ince. (CCD.
In late 1996, CentreBank made a loan of just over a million dollars, its largest outstanding loan at the time, to Battleground Hybrids, Inc. (BHI). In 1997, BHI's sister company, Prairie Production, Inc. (PPD), sought additional financing. 1 BHI's ability to repay CentreBank's initial loan depended on PPI's financial health.
In April 1997, representatives of Cen-treBank, Civitas Bank, and PPI met to discuss the possibility of Songer investing in PPI. Songer agreed to provide financial assistance to PPI though proceeds provided by Civitas. For the purpose of investing in PPI, Songer personally executed two promissory notes in which he promised to pay Civitas approximately $500,000 plus interest. Songer also granted Civitas a lien on his shares of CentreBank, executed an irrevocable stock power and delivered the stock certificates to Civitas. Furthermore, Songer granted Civitas a mortgage on real property owned by CCI and assigned rental income from it.
Civitas deposited the loans' proceeds, in the form of two cashiers' checks, into PPI's checking account. The cashiers checks were made payable to Songer but were never endorsed by him. Songer made only one payment on the promissory notes and subsequently defaulted.
Civitas filed suit against Songer and CCI. The complaint listed two counts, one styled "Complaint on Note" and the other "Replevin." 2 In count one, Civitas *63 sought to collect the principal on the notes, accrued interest, costs and attorneys' fees. In count two, it sought an order "authorizing [Civitas] to liquidate the collateral granted to it by Stephen A. Songer, a determination of lien priority in said collateral if required, an extinguishment of rights of all parties claiming an interest in the collateral and for all other relief just and proper under the premises." (R. at 18.)
In their answer, Songer and CCI asserted six affirmative defenses: (1) lack of consideration, (2) conversion, (8) forgery, (4) estoppel, (5) fraud, and (6) lack of holder-in-due-course status. They requested a jury trial on the entire subject matter of Civitas' complaint. The trial court denied the request.
After a bench trial, the court awarded judgment to Civitas on the promissory notes plus interest and attorneys' fees. It also ordered foreclosure of the mortgages and liens Songer had given Civitas as seeu-rity. *
Songer and his company appealed, arguing that their right to a jury trial was violated, that a notice of foreclosure action was not given, that the right of redemption was violated, that Civitas improperly distributed the money from the promissory notes, and that the evidence did not support the trial court's conclusions of law. The Court of Appeals found that CCI was entitled to a three-month redemption period before execution of foreclosure, but found for Civitas on all other issues. Songer v. Civitas Bank, No. 23A01-0004-CV-132, slip op. at 15,
I. Indiana's Guarantee of Trial by Jury
Article I, section 20 of the Indiana Constitution reads, "In all civil cases, the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate." The right to a jury trial holds a special place in the system of justice, and we guard it against encroachment.
That said, it has long been agreed that Article I, section 20 serves to preserve the right to a jury trial only as it existed at common law. See City of Crown Point v. Newcomer,
(A) Causes triable by court and by jury. Issues of law and issues of fact in causes that prior to the eighteenth day of June, 1852, were of exclusive equitable jurisdiction shall be tried by the court; issues of fact in all other causes shall be triable as the same are now triable. In case of the joinder of causes of action or defenses which, prior to said date, were of exclusive equitable jurisdiction with causes of action or defenses which, prior to said date, were designated as actions at law and triable by jury-the former shall be triable by the court, and the latter by a jury, unless waived; the trial *64 of both may be at the same time or at different times, as the court may direct.
II. The History of Joining Law and Equity Claims
Trial Rule 38(A) is thus necessarily the starting point. The policy described by Rule 38(A) has existed in substantially the same form for over 120 years, commencing as a legislative enactment. See Rev. St. 1894, § 412; Rev. St. 1881, § 409 (nearly identical statutory forerunners of Trial Rule 38(A)). This legislative enactment and the later judicial rule have informed the historic understanding of the Constitution's meaning on the subject.
Rule 38(A) and its statutory predecessors generally set out three principles. First, suits for which jurisdiction was exclusively equitable prior to June 18, 1852, are to be tried by the court. Second, issues of fact in all other suits are to be tried "as the same are now triable." T.R. 838(A). Finally, when both equitable and legal causes of action or defenses are joined in a single case, the equitable causes of action or defenses are to be tried by the court while the legal causes of action or defenses are to be tried by a jury. Id.
One of the earliest decisions on joinder of legal and equitable causes of action was Carmichael v. Adams,
There could, in such a case as this-a suit upon a note and mortgage-be no decree without an ascertainment of the amount due on the note, and, therefore, the whole matter was necessarily for the decision of the court. In order to determine whether the plaintiff was entitled to the relief sought, it was absolutely necessary to ascertain that there was a debt secured by the mortgage, for, if there was no debt, there was nothing upon which the power of the court could be exercised. It was not possible to make a step of progress in the decree without settling the question of the defendants' indebtedness.
Id. at 527. See also Evans v. Nealis,
In Hendricks v. Frank,
Soon after Hendricks, we decided Brown v. Russell,
In Towns v. Smith,
One feature of the case, it is true, was an action on a promissory note, and the relief demanded was merely of a pecuniary character. To that extent the proceeding resembles an ordinary action at law. In order to obtain final and more effectual relief, however, the suit combined a proceeding in the nature of a creditors' bill to set aside and cancel a fraudulent conveyance, which belongs exclusively to the procedure and jurisdiction of chancery.
After Towns came Albrecht v. C.C. Foster Lumber Co.,
If the case history stopped here, our decision today would be relatively simple. We would hold that Songer and CCI had no right to a jury trial. Unfortunately, subsequent decisions and changes in the pleading system have muddied the waters significantly.
Six years after Albrecht, this Court considered a similar issue. In Field v. Brown,
Nevertheless, the Field Court reaffirmed that "where equity takes jurisdiction of the essential features of a cause, it will determine the whole controversy, though there may be incidental questions of a legal nature."
5
From this correct statement of law, Son-ger and CCI try to prove too much. They argue that the Court's statement that "where equity takes jurisdiction of the essential features of a cause, it will determine the whole controversy" is limited to one-count complaints. (See Appellants' Resp. to Amici at 4.) We disagree. As the U.S. Supreme Court said in Ex parte Milligan,
On the other hand, a "cause of action" is a legal theory of a lawsuit. See Black's Law Dictionary 213, 214 (7th ed.1999). Several "causes of action" can potentially be encompassed within a single "cause." Thus, a single "cause" might consist of a contract "cause of action" and a tort "cause of action."
As such, Field's holding is that where the essential features of a suit sound in equity, the entire controversy is drawn into equity, including incidental questions of a legal nature.
The inverse must also be true. Where equity does not take jurisdiction of the essential features of a cause, a multi-count complaint may be severed, and different issues may be tried before either a jury or the court at the same proceeding. This is consistent with the language and spirit of Rule 38(A).
The subsequent case of Sweigart v. State,
The equitable relief prayed for in the complaint was separate and apart from the legal relief sought and was properly an issue for the court to try.... The fact that the plaintiff joins legal and equitable causes of action in a complaint does not deprive a defendant of the right *67 to a trial by jury on the purely legal issues.
Sweigart and Field can therefore be read together and harmonized with past decisions. Where the essential features of a suit sound in equity, such that the equitable relief asked for is not separate and apart from the legal relief sought, the entire action is drawn into equity. And in the prior decisions from Carmichael to Albrecht, the Court adjudged the controversies as having essentially equitable features. 7
IIH. Modern Detours
Modern decisions on this topic reflect the difficulty of parsing through the issue. A fair amount of case law, including some of our own, demonstrates the risks of a shorthand, imprecise recitation of the rule. See, e.g., Fager v. Hundt,
An overview of recent appellate decisions reveals continuing disagreement and a multitude of tests used for determining a litigant's right to jury trial. We accepted transfer to restate the basic principles.
Much of this modern inconsistency can be traced to misuse of Hiatt v. Yergin,
The Court of Appeals examined several prior decisions, much as we have done today. It cited both Towns,
After a thoughtful analysis, the court held that "[tlo determine if an action with mixed issues of fact sounds in equity or law, the court must turn to the complaint and pleadings as a whole."
Unfortunately, later decisions misconstrued Hictt's holding, prying it loose from the rule of Towns, Hendricks, and Field. For instance, in Jones v. Marengo State Bank, the court cited Hiatt for the proposition that "if an essential part of a cause of action is equitable the rest of the case is
*68
drawn into equity."
If the essential features of a suit as a whole are equitable and the individual causes of action are not distinct or severa-ble, the entitlement to a jury trial is extinguished. The opposite is also true. If a single cause of action in a multi-count complaint is plainly equitable and the other causes of action assert purely legal claims that are sufficiently distinct and severable, Trial Rule 38(A) requires a jury trial on the legal claims.
A review of Rule 38(A) and more than 120 years of decisions reveals that Songer is correct in arguing that the simple inclusion of an equitable claim, standing alone, does not warrant drawing an entire case into equity. Such an approach violates Rule 38(A), and we disapprove cases holding otherwise. Something more than the mere presence of an equitaBle claim is necessary. 8
The appropriate question is whether the. essential features of the suit are equitable. To determine if equity takes jurisdiction of the essential features of a suit, we evaluate the nature of the underlying substantive claim and look beyond both the label a party affixes to the action and the subsidiary issues that may arise within such claims. Courts must look to the substance and central character of the complaint, the rights and interests involved, and the relief demanded. In the appropriate case, the issues arising out of discovery may also be important. 9
IV. The Current Dispute
With this framework in mind, we move to the current controversy and de *69 cide whether Songer and CCI were entitled to a jury trial.
The erux of Songer's argument is that Civitas' desire to foreclose the lien was only "incidental" to its primary goal of "recover[|ing] a monetary judgment against Appellants for the collection of certain promissory notes." (Appellants' Trans. Pet. at 7.) While we agree that Civitas core objective was to regain the funds it lent, this was not through a money judgment. The purpose of count one was to establish the amount Civitas was entitled to collect out of the collateral it possessed, including interest and attorneys' fees. See Carmichael,
In the instant case, Civitas lent Songer $500,000 secured by CentreBank stock and real property owned by CCI. It was not a judgment lien Civitas sought, but rather court authorization to liquidate the collateral it held. It would be nonsensical for Civitas to ask for a $500,000 money judgment and then be forced to seek attachment of its judgment lien to unencumbered property when it already possessed properly attached collateral.
Instead, the essence of the claim was for a judicial pronouncement that Civitas' pos-sessory lien was perfected and that the collateral could be liquidated. At its heart, this was a suit to foreclose a lien on property.
As we observed above, the vast weight of authority holds that foreclosure actions are essentially equitable. See, e.g., Skendzel v. Marshall,
Appellants additionally argue that denying them a jury trial was unjust because Civitas could have liquidated the collateral without a judicial pronouncement. (Appellants' Trans. Pet. at 6.)
The provisions of former Article 9 govern this transaction and provide secured parties with options in enforcing their security interests. First, Ind.Code Ann. § 26-1-9-501 (West 1995) states that a secured party "may reduce his claim to judgment, foreclosure, or otherwise enforce the security interest by any available judicial procedure." Alternatively, Ind. Code Ann. § 26-1-9-504 (West 1995) allows "[al secured party after default [to] sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of any or all of the collateral in its then condition or following any commercially reasonable preparation or processing."
Before acting without judicial intervention, though, a secured party must assure that the security interest has attached and is enforceable against the debtor. Ind. Code Ann. § 26-1-9-208 (West 1995). Attachment generally occurs when (1) a debt- or signs a security agreement describing *70 the collateral, (2) value is given, and (8) the debtor retains rights in the collateral. Id. Given the highly contested nature of this case, including Songer's claim that value was not given for the security interest, (see Appellant's Br. at 22), Civitas did well to seek a judicial pronouncement before enforcing their security agreement.
Civitas' decision to seek court approval through foreclosure rather than run the risks associated with liquidation did not alter the nature of the lawsuit. As the Court of Appeals stated, "[OJncee [Civitas] sought to reduce this claim to judgment, the cause of action depended on the equity jurisdiction of the trial court." Songer, slip op. at 8-9.
V. The Court of Appeals Was Otherwise Correct
As for the other issues Songer and CCI raised before the Court of Appeals, we summarily affirm that court's decision. Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A)(2). While CCI was entitled to a three-month period of redemption, Appellants waived the issues of notice of mortgage foreclosure and statute of frauds by failing to raise these issues at trial, and the trial court's conclusions of fact and law were supported by the evidence.
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. The two companies were both operated by Stephen Ratcliff. (R. at 331-32, 550-51.)
. While Civitas styled count two as "Replev-in," this is clearly the wrong label. Replevin is an "action for the repossession of personal property wrongfully taken or detained by the defendant." Black's Law Dictionary 1302 (7th ed.1999). Civitas could not have been seeking replevin because it already had pos
*63
session of the stock certificates. It is a well-settled rule that in determining whether a claim is legal or equitable, "Indiana courts look beyond the label given a particular action and evaluate the nature of the underlying substantive claim." Weisman v. Hopf-Himsel, Inc.,
. In 1881, the legislature created five Commissioners, one to be appointed by each of the five members of the Supreme Court. Act 1881, Ch. XVII, p. 92. The Commissioners prepared opinions for consideration by the Court.
. See also Jones v. Marengo State Bank,
. Cf. McCoy v. Oldham,
A somewhat different test was set out in Robertson v. McPherson,
. This conclusion is buttressed by the wording of Trial Rule 38(A) itself. The first part of Rule 38(A) refers to "causes that prior to the eighteenth day of June, 1852, were of exclusive equitable jurisdiction." TR. 38(A) (emphasis added). Further on, the rule discusses "joinder of causes of action or defenses, which prior to said date, were of exclusive equitable jurisdiction." Id. (emphasis added). "Causes" and "causes of action'" cannot be read as interchangeable terms. The holding in Field is not "where equity takes jurisdiction of the essential features of a cause of action, it takes jurisdiction over the entire suit." Rather, the better understanding of the Field Court's holding is that "where equity takes jurisdiction of the essential features of a suit, the entire proceeding is drawm into equity" though there may be incidental questions of a legal nature.
. See, e.g., Carmichael,
. Saying this, we also recognize that this position is not without support in the law. For instance, Professor Pomeroy stated:
Where a court of equity has obtained jurisdiction over some portion or feature of a controversy, it may, and will in general, proceed to decide the whole issues, and to award complete relief, although the rights of the parties are strictly legal, and the final remedy granted is of the kind which might be conferred by a court of law.
1 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence, § 231, at 410 (5th ed.1941) (footnote omitted), quoted in Kruse, Kruse & Miklosko, Inc. v. Beedy,
. Examination of the pleadings alone will likely not end the inquiry. The Supreme Court decisions we discussed earlier were all decided under the rigid requirements of code pleading. The current system of notice pleading requires only a short, plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief and a demand for such relief. See TR. 8(A). Although notice pleading has significantly eased the litigant's initial pleading burden, it has also made our decision-making process more difficult regarding equitable and legal claims. As the Higtt court discussed:
[Ajscertainment of the theory of a complaint or other pleading to determine if the right to a fury trial exists is hampered. Particularly where little or no discovery has been availed of by the parties, the effect of modern pleading may often be to obscure the theory of a pleading when a jury trial is demanded. At least for the purpose of demanding a jury trial, a pleader should bear in mind the traditional distinction between law and equity. We say this recognizing that the pleadings no longer necessarily serve the function of formulating issues, having in large part been replaced by discovery procedure.
. See also Puterbaugh v. Puterbaugh,
