The appellee’s complaint is based on a note and mortgage executed by the appellant. The answer' is in several paragraphs, and, without interposing a demurrer, the appellee replied.
There are several good paragraphs of answer, and conced
The appellee chose to reply to all of the answers without testing their sufficiency by demurrer, and now argues that it may avail itself of the demurrer to the reply filed by the appellee. The case is entirely unlike that of a defendant who has a bad answer and complains of a ruling holding good a bad reply. Clearly enough his case is well disposed of by informing him that a bad reply is good enough for a bad answer. So, too, the present case is essentially different from that of a- plaintiff asking a reversal, where a demurrer has been sustained to a bad reply to a bad answer. In this case the ruling is invoked by a party who secured all he asked and who took no exception, but relies upon an exception taken by his adversary. Our statute is very careful to require that parties who desire to save a question upon a ruling must reserve an exception, and in a very great variety of cases the court has given this statute full and strict effect. There is good reason for the rule. The trial court and the adverse party should be informed that the ruling is to be contested, and the appellate court should be enabled to see from the record what rulings were contested in the t.rial court. Again, parties ought not to be allowed to shift ground and contest in the Supreme Court points not regularly contested in the lower. The spirit of our statute, and the effectiveness and consistency of our code system of pleading, require that one who secures exactly the ruling he asks, and who takes no exception, should not be allowed to complain on appeal that something more favorable than he asked was not granted
The cases of Wiley v. Howard, 15 Ind. 169, and Reed v. Higgins,
Leaving now the question of pleading, we come to the question presented by the ruling on the demurrer to the evidence, remarking, however, that it is very doubtful whether the de
Premiums paid to secure insurance can not be recovered if the risk has once attached. If a policy is valid in its inception, then the company can not be required to refund the premiums received, although it may subsequently wrongfully attempt to declare a forfeiture. Continental Life Ins. Co. v. Houser,
"Where an assured is entitled to a policy under his contract with the company, he may maintain a suit in equity to enforce specific performance of the contract. The suit is in all its essential features a suit for specific performance, and may be maintained in cases where the courts would entertain suits of a similar nature. Hayner v. Ameriean, etc., Co.,
Assuming that the evidence shows that the appellant had a contract entitling him to a paid-up policy, and that he performed all his part of that contract, and was entitled to have it specifically performed, the question still l’emains whether the x'ight to demand specific performance of such a contract can be properly asserted in a suit to foreclose a mortgage given to secui’e a loan.
The evidence shows that the two transactions were legally distinct and different, and that each stood upon its own independent consideration. In the one case the consideration for the note and mortgage was the loan of money; in the other the consideration for the policy was the payment of pi’emiums. There is nothing which, in law or equity, binds the two transactions together’, or authorizes the inference that one grows out of the other.
There is an essential difference between the motive which induces a party to enter into a contract and the consideration yielded for its support. “ Motive,” said an English judge, “ is not the same thing with consideration.” Thomas v. Thomas, 2 Q. B. 851. In Philpot v. Gruninger,
A counter-claim very closely corresponds to the cross bill of the old chancery practice, but is more comprehensive, for it embraces recoupment. Woodruff v. Garner,
Recoupment signifies reduction, and originally a defendant could only secure a reduction of the amount of recovery by recouping. It has been steadily held that recoupment is only proper in cases where the defendant’s claim grows out of the same contract or transaction as that upon which the plaintiff’s cause of action is founded. Davenport v. Hubbard,
A cross bill under the chancery practice, to quote the language of an author long held in' high esteem, “ can be sustained only on matter growing out of the original bill.” 2 Daniel Ch. Pr. 1548 n. The same doctrine is sometimes stated
In the construction of statutes it is always proper to consider the law as it stood at the time the statute was adopted and the change intended to be accomplished. We know judicially the purpose our statute wa,s intended to accomplish because that is matter of history. The adoption of the reformed system of code procedure forms an important epoch in the history of the law of this State, and we are fully informed as to the causes which led to its adoption, as well as the purpose it was intended to accomplish. The purpose is, indeed, prominently and plainly indicated in the code itself. A leading purpose was to blend in one system the chancery and common law procedure, but to so blend them that the new procedure, while possessing some of the features of both, should form in itself a complete and harmonious system. In executing this purpose the counter-claim was made to include both recoupment and crossbill, and, perhaps, something more, but it was not intended to overthrow the fundamental principle that the matter made the subject of a counter-claim should grow out of or be connected with, the subject of the original suit. The language of the statute, unaided by extrinsic consideration, indicates with much clearness that the counter-claim must be connected with the subject of the original action, for the provision reads: “A counter-claim is any matter arising out of or connected with the cause of action which might be the subject of an action in favor of the defendant, or which would tend to reduce the plaintiff's claim or
Our decisions have invariably treated the counter-claim as proper only in cases where the subject-matter of the counterclaim is connected with the original cause of action, and have refused to permit the defence of'counter-claim where the matter relied on was an independent one, having no connection with the subject of the original complaint. In Douthitt v. Smith,
The matters pleaded as a counter-claim must be connected with the subject of the original action, or the transaction out of which it arose, in a legal sense. It is not enough that the parties are .the same, or that the transactions were made on the same day; there must be a recognized legal relation between the matters pleaded as a counter-claim and those pleaded in the original complaint. There must be some legal (using the word legal in. its broad signification) relationship between the ground of recovery alleged in the counter-claim and the matters alleged as the cause of action by the plaintiff.
In defining a counter-claim the code provides that it “ is any matter arising out of or connected with the cause of action,” and if a strict construction were adopted the-office of a counter-claim would be very much restricted, for the defendant would be confined to such matters as were connected with or grew out of the statement of the facts pleaded as constituting the grounds of the plaintiff’s right to recover. A liberal construction has, however, been given to the code, and a counter-claim is good if it allege matters connected with the subject of the original action. Our cases do,-indeed, go further, for they hold that a counter-claim maybe maintained where it reaches the object of the action. Tabor v. Mackkee,
The term “ counter-claim ” is used to denote the matters constituting the ground of defence as well as the pleading in which it is stated, and the term “ cross complaint ” is very frequently used to designate the pleading, although it has been said that “ counter-claim ” is the proper title of the pleading. Whatever term may be used to designate the pleading, whether “ cross complaint ” or “ counter-claim,” it is only proper where it pleads matter connected with the subject of the original action which entitles the defendant to affirmative relief or mitigates the recovery. There are, therefore, two classes of counter-claims. Campbell v. Routt,
We do not find it necessary to decide, and, therefore, do not decide, whether the appellant was or was not entitled to a paid-up policy, for, conceding his claim that he was entitled to such a policy to be just, still he can not, in this case, assert a right to have a policy executed to him, for that is not a proper subject of counter-claim under the case made by the evidence.
The plaintiff’s cause of action was admitted, and the burden of proof was, therefore, on the appellant, and the former had a right to demur to the evidence. A party who has the burden can not successfully demur, but where the cause of action is admitted, it is the defendant, not the plaintiff, who has the burden, and a demurrer to the evidence by the latter is entirely proper. Fritz v. Clark,
Judgment affirmed.
