181 Ind. 504 | Ind. | 1914
This is an action by appellee, as receiver of Louis R. MacDonald, to recover for a balance alleged to be due said MacDonald for work done on appellants’ right of way. Issues were joined and such proceedings had as resulted in a judgment for appellee in the sum of $1,258.97, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
We are required first to determine appellee’s earnest contention that the assignment of errors in this case properly presents no question for our consideration. It reads as follows, omitting the caption: “The appellants say there is manifest error in the judgment and proceedings in this cause, in this: 1. The court erred in overruling the separate and several demurrer of appellants to the second paragraph of appellee’s reply to the second, third, fourth and fifth paragraphs of the answer of appellants. 2. The court erred in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial. ’ ’
Appellee’s contention that a joint assignment of errors by several appellants presents no question as to a ruling against one of such appellants which constitutes error
We adhere to the distinction thus pointed out and hold that it is applicable here. Appellants were sued jointly and their interests in this action are identical, one appellant being the lessor of the other. They have elected to act in harmony in making their defense and while it must be admitted that both the demurrer to appellee’s reply and the motion for a new trial are termed “separate and several”, and that separate and several exceptions were reserved to the rulings thereon, yet in each instance only one pleading was filed and its effect was the same as though it had been termed “joint”. It is true that the assignment of errors is the complaint on appeal and must be governed by rules of pleading which are definite and certain but we see no reason why such rules should be more technical in appellate procedure than in that of the trial
It is alleged in appellee’s complaint that on June 15,1904, appellants entered into a contract with Louis R. MacDonald, a competent railroad contractor, for the making of certain improvements on appellants’ roadbed and right of way; that under MacDonald’s supervision said work progressed agreeably in all respects to the terms of said contract from the date of the execution thereof until October 24, 1904, when MacDonald abandoned said work and said contract and absconded and left the State of Indiana; that he has ever since remained away from said State and is now a nonresident thereof; that at the time he absconded and abandoned said contract, he left debts and liabilities to his laborers, materialmen and other creditors on said work which aggregated more than $3,000; that from June 15, 1904, to October 24, 1904, he completed improvements on the right of way, track, and roadbed of appellant companies to the value of over $6,000, all of which was due and owing from appellants to said MacDonald on December 8, 1904, when, with notice to appellants, appellee was appointed and qualified as receiver of said MacDonald; that a demand for said sum was duly made by appellee on the day following his appointment but that appellants then and have ever since failed and refused to pay the same or any part thereof to appellee. A copy of the original contract with Mac Donald is made a part of this pleading.
Appellants filed an answer in five paragraphs of which it is necessary to make particular reference herein to the fifth only. That paragraph admits the execution of the contract set out in appellee’s complaint but alleges that in
Appellee replied in two paragraphs. The first is a general denial while the second, which modifies the demand made in the complaint, alleges that appellee was duly appointed and qualified as receiver for said MacDonald on December 8, 1904, in a certain action then pending in the Dubois Circuit Court wherein Joseph and Andrew Greener were plaintiffs and said MacDonald and six others, including appellants, were defendants; “that during the progress
The remaining question which we have to consider is determined by those authorities which hold that where the surety, or indemnitor, on the bond of a contractor who abandons his contract, assumes and completes the work, he is subrogated to all rights which the owner of the property might have enforced against the contractor if such owner had elected to declare the contract
It is true that the' lien of the surety on the funds in the hands of the owner will extend no further than is necessary to protect such surety against loss but in the pleading before us there is no averment that the balance paid over by appellants to the Southern Contracting Company was more than sufficient to repay the surety for its outlay in completing the work and no facts are pleaded from which such inference may be drawn. The demurrer to the second paragraph- of reply should have been sustained. Judgment reversed.
Note. — Reported in 104 N. E. 19. As to subrogation in the case of a surety, see 134 Am. St. 566. See, also, under (1) 2 Cyc. 1003; (2) 2 Cyc. 980; (3) 34 Cyc. 362, 363; (4) 34 Cyc. 402, 426.