Thatcher v. Stickney Bros.

88 Iowa 454 | Iowa | 1893

Granger, J.

*4561. px,EADiiro ana transfer io eqmty docket. *455I. The questions we are to determine are presented by an assignment of errors. The *456first is that the court erred in setting down the cause for trial as an equitable proceeding. The assignment leads ns to consider the state of the pleadings in the case. The oi’iginal petition is in paragraphs numbered from “first” to “sixth.” It contains but a single count, and is for damages because of the failure to pay the assessments, resulting in a refusal by the corporation to make the transfer on the books. The answer, because of its admissions, makes the issue one upon its allegations for affirmative relief in the reformation of the contract, and the denial by the plaintiff. "With the issue thus presented, if the contract should be reformed, it would show that the plaintiff should pay the assessments, and he would have no cause of action. If not so reformed the admissions by the defendant would show its liability, and the result would be determined in either case without further proceedings. The issue as to reformation is purely an equitable one. Carey v. Gunnison, 65 Iowa, 702. With this condition of the pleadings there could be no issue for a jury.

But the plaintiff files an amendment to the petition, averring false and fraudulent representations by the defendant as to the value of the stock. The amendment is not a separate count, but is numbered “first.” To the petition thus amended there is filed an “amended and substituted answer” in paragraphs one to thirteen, in which are admissions, denials, and matters for affirmative relief, as in the former answer, with a like prayer. It is because of the transfer of the issue thus made to the equity docket for trial that complaint is made. The petition should have been made in two counts; one for a breach of the contract to assign the stock, and the other for fraud. So pleaded, the answer must necessarily have been in two divisions, and the legal and equitable issues have been entirely separate, and susceptible to assignment for trial in the proper *457forum. Without objection by either party the issues have been mingled, and trial had thereon. The objection to the transfer was not as to the issue of fraud, but as to the whole action. It was not error to transfer it. It was the defendant’s right to have the equitable issues so tried. In Van Orman v. Merrill, 27 Iowa, 476, it is held that, where the answer in an action at law sets up defenses, some of which are legal and some equitable, and the ease is tried without any steps being taken by either party to separate the issues thus made, and have them tried separately, it will, on appeal, be considered one case only, and will be regarded as an equity case. It seems to us that such a rule should obtain in this case. The parties have treated this as but a single cause of action, without even intimating, in the court below, so far as we discover, that but a single trial was desired.

2. practice: fore“aaiS.onSai evidence. II. On the second of April, 1891, the record shows an entry, “Cause submitted.” On the fourth of April the defendant filed a motion and affidavit to set aside the submission and permit additional evidence to be offered. The affidavit is a showing of newly discovered evidence and of diligence, and the court, against the plaintiff’s objection, granted the motion, of which complaint is now made. It is urged that there had been a final submission of the cause, and that the court had no authority to grant the motion, relying upon Code, section 2799. That section was construed in Sickles v. Dallas Center Bank, 81 Iowa, 408, and is authority for the action of the court. It is said that the showing is not based on an evident oversight or mistake as contemplated by the section, but upon newly discovered evidence. We think the'showing, taken altogether, was such that the district court might have found that there was an oversight or mistake, and with its discretion in such a matter we should not interfere.

*458s. appeal: su®dence: ‘defective abstract. III. The third assignment involves the merits of the ease on the evidence, and the abstract contains no showing that it is one of all the evidence, It has the certificates of the judge and rep0rter ag to the contents of the transcript. The transcript is not the abstract. Before we can determine the case upon the evidence, we must have an abstract, showing that it is one of all the evidence. The judgment is affirmed.

Kinne, J., took no part in this case.
midpage