10 Ind. 294 | Ind. | 1858
Suit upon a note and an account. Answer in three paragraphs:
1. General denial.
2. Payment of the note.
3. A set-off, reading as follows:
“ To damages done by said plaintiff to said defendant, in farming land in an unskillful manner, while plaintiff was tenant of defendant, on his farm on Pretty Prairie, being the east, &c., during the year from March 1st, 1853, to March 1st, 1854,.....$175.00 To like damages for the year from March 1st, 1854, to March 1st, 1855, - - - - 198.00
Demurrer sustained to this paragraph. Issues of fact upon the others. Trial and judgment for the plaintiff.
The deposition of a witness, taken de bene esse, was
A witness testified to admissions of the defendant. It is claimed that the testimony was improper, because the admissions were made in an attempt to compromise. But the admissions proved were not made for the sake of a compromise, nor as a part of one. They clearly were admissible. Cates v. Kellogg, 9 Ind. R. 506.
It was claimed that certian pencil-marks on the note sued on, indicated that it had been canceled. The jury inspected the note, heard the evidence touching the marks, and the payment of the note, and, from the whole, found that it was not paid. The question was properly left to them, as it could not be said, as a point of law, that the marks imported a cancellation of the note.
Upon the weight of the evidence, the Court cannot interfere with the judgment.
-The only difficult question in the case, is that arising upon the demurrer to the set-off.
Our Statute enacts that a set-off must arise “ out of a debt, duty or contract, liquidated or not;” that is to say, unliquidated damages may be set off, where they arise out of a debt, duty or contract. 2 B. S. p. 39, § 57. They may also be set up by way of recoupment or counter-claim. Id. p. 41, § 59.
It would seem, then, that where a party was sued touching the subject-matter of a contract, he might set up, by way of .counter-claim in such suit, any demand he might have for unliquidated damages, growing out of such contract; while, if not sued on that contract, but some other, then he might set up by way of set-off, his claim for damages growing out of the former contract, in the suit upon the second. In other words, the same matter may be set up as a counter-claim in a suit upon the contract, or as a set-off,' in a suit upon another contract. But, however
The terms of the contract of renting should have been set out, that the Court might have judged how far it required the tenant to go in husband-like farming; and then the acts of omission should have been specified, that the Court could have judged whether they were violations of the lease. The claim for these damages should have been set out with as much certainty, as would have been requisite in a cross action for them.
Per Curiam. — The judgment is affirmed, with 5 per cent, damages and costs.