25 Iowa 280 | Iowa | 1868
This is an action brought by the State, pursuant to the authority and provisions of chapter 117 of the Laws of the Eleventh General Assembly. Laws of 1866, p. 124. It is brought in equity for the use of Boone and twelve other counties-. There are sixteen
“ It is further stipulated, that said Orwig will assign to said Allen, all policies of insurance which he now holds on said property, or any part thereof; that he shall remain in possession of said property during said term of one hundred and twenty days, with the condition that ho shall take good care of the same, and faithfully account to said Allen for the rents and the profits arising from the use of the same, as often as- the said Allen shall require, which rents and profits shall be applied on the trust herein expressed; that the said Allen shall have power to take possession of said premises at any time within one hundred and twenty days, if the said Orwig shall fail to comply with either or both of the conditions herein expressed; that if the said Orwig shall not have performed on his part all the stipulations of this memorandum, the
“R. G. ORWIG,
MARIA S. ORWIG,
B. P. ALLEN.”
The petition then avers, that there were drafts issued by the United States for the benefit of the several counties, specifying the amount to each, aggregating $41,448.21; that said Orwig, fraudulently, and without authority, indorsed said drafts with, and forged the name of W. M. Stone, governor of the State of Iowa, and negotiated apart thereof to the First National Bank of Des Moines, and a part thereof to the State National Bank of Des Moines (specifying the drafts to each) and appropriated the proceeds to his own use, and has failed to account for any part thereof. The said banks are made defendants, and charged with having paid said drafts on forged indorsements, and that they still hold the money due thereon, for the benefit of the parties entitled to the proceeds of the drafts.
The American Emigrant company is made defendant, as asserting claim to the proceeds, of some of the drafts, by virtue of being assignee of the swamp land claims of certain counties. Rollins & Co. are made defendants, as claiming a vendor’s lien upon a part of the property embraced in the deed of trust, which lien is denied. O. P. Luse is made defendant as claiming a lien upon a certain other portion of the property. Byron Rice is made defendant as claiming a vendor’s lien upon another portion. C. Youngman is made defendant as claiming a mechanic’s lien upon a part of the property. J. B. Stewart is also made defendant as claiming another lien upon a part of the property. All these claims and liens are denied. Hon. W. H. Holmes, State treasurer, is made defendant, as being the proper person entitled to receive the proceeds of said drafts, and to whom Orwig
The petitioner asks an accounting between the plaintiff and the several parties named as defendants ; the ascertainment of the several liens claimed, their priorities and the amounts of each; a decree against the several parties for the several sums due, and a foreclosure of the deed of trust and a sale of the property therein described for the benefit of the several parties entitled, and for general relief.
This ruling of the court refusing a jury trial and ordering a reference, is the only error assigned.
That this action is one of purely and exclusively equitable cognizance, under the rules and practice as they
By the provisions of our Code, all equitable actions are triable by the first method, that is, on written evidence, as chancery causes were formerly tried, except in divorce cases, in foreclosure of tax title cases, and of mortgages ; in default cases, and in cases where all the parties thereto consent to try by the second method, in which cases the second method shall obtain. By the second method of
Without now conceding or stopping to controvert the proposition made by counsel, that when the new Constitution was adopted, it guaranteed the right of trial by jury as then provided by law, rather than as it obtained at the common law, we are forced to dissent from his conclusion upon another ground, and that is, that the law of 1852-3 did not give the right of trial by jury in all cases. The Code of 1851 provided for and required a jury fee of three dollars in all cases of jury trial (§ 1772), and also that such fee should be paid in advance (§ 2528). Now, we hold and construe the law of 1852-3 to be simply a repeal of these provisions, by declaring that a party should have a right of tidal by jury in all cases, without being required to pay in advance a fee of three dollars, or to pay it at all. Such is the construction the law has heretofore received from both bench and bar, and in no case, so far as the reports show or our knowledge extends, has the construction now contended for been claimed. However this may be, there can be no l’easonable doubt as to its true and correct construction as above given. From this, it follows that the defendant did not have a right, either under the Constitution or laws, “ to demand that the whole issue be tried by a jury under the instruction of the court.” See Mead v. Walker, 17 Wis. 189; The County Board of Supervisors v. Dunning, 20 id. 210; Ross v. Irving, 14 Ill. 171; Murphy v. The People, 2 Cowen, 815; and see also the question discussed in brief of counsel and opinion of court in Lewis et al. v. Garrett's Administrator, 5 How. (Miss.) 434.
The chief justice concurs in the conclusion resulting from the foregoing, but prefers to rest that conclusion upon this thought: Conceding appellant’s proposition, that, under sections 2999 and 3000, the cause was, as to Orwig, a mortgage foreclosure case, yet, it was undeniably of equity cognizance, as distinguished from a case at lamo, and being such, the court, under section 3090, could compulsorily refer it, and appellant could not, as of right, demand a jury trial, since neither the old nor new Constitution, nor any statute, ever gave an absolute right to a jury trial in equity suits. The other members of the court concur in this view also.
There was no error in refusing a jury trial, nor in the order of reference, and the order of the District Court is
Affirmed.