Tooze v. Heighton

156 P. 245 | Or. | 1916

Mr. Justice Harris

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

Omitting the details and reciting only tbe result of tbe transactions, tbe complaint, in substance, states that Tooze delivered to Heigbton a written contract for tbe sale of tbe hotel upon which Heigbton made substantial payments; that Tooze and Heigbton exchanged their interests in tbe hotel for tbe farm; that Tooze was to deliver to Heigbton a written contract containing specified stipulations for tbe sale of tbe farm in lieu of tbe contract for the sale of the hotel; that Tooze failed to keep any of bis promises; and that Heigbton is therefore entitled to recover tbe payments made by him together with other damages. Tbe complaint in equity, which for convenience we shall call a cross-bill, although it is only in tbe nature of a cross-bill, sets forth that Heigbton borrowed money from Tooze, who received tbe farm as security for tbe loan; that it was agreed that, if Heig’hton reduced tbe indebtedness to $3,000 by October 1, 1914, Tooze would make him a contract for tbe sale of tbe farm, but, if tbe reduction was not so made, the farm “should be tbe absolute property” of Tooze.

If tbe agreement was as claimed by Heigbton, and if Tooze has committed the breaches complained of by tbe former, then Heigbton is entitled to recover a judgment. If, however, tbe agreement was as alleged by Tooze, and if Heigbton has been guilty of tbe violations charged against him, then Heigbton would not be entitled to treat this agreement as rescinded and *550to recover the payments made by him. Both parties admit that there was an agreement but they differ radically as to the terms of the agreement. The right of Heighton to recover in the action at law depends upon whether he can prove the agreement alleged by him; and it is plain that Tooze can prevent a recovery by pleading and proving in the action at law the contract and a breach of the contract as claimed by him. Heighton argues that Tooze could have pleaded in the action at law every fact recited in the cross-bill, and that therefore the latter was not entitled to convert the litigation into a suit in equity by filing a cross-bill. Tooze contends that his right to foreclose the contract entitled him to file a cross-bill, because only a court of equity could foreclose the interest of Heighton; and therefore the single question for decision is whether Tooze had the right to transfer the controversy from an action at law to a suit in equity by the filing of a complaint in the nature of a cross-bill as provided for in Section 390, L. O. L.

In 1862 the legislature passed an act to provide a Code of Civil Procedure, Section 377 of which reads thus:

“Bills of revivor and bills of review of whatever nature, cross-bills, exceptions for insufficiency, impertinence, or irrelevancy are abolished; hut a decree in equity may be impeached and set aside, or suspended or avoided, or carried into execution, by an original suit. The mode of proceeding in a suit from the commencement to the determination thereof, and thereafter until satisfaction or performance of the decree be had, shall be as provided in this chapter and not otherwise”: Laws 1862, pp. 99, 100, Code of Civ. Proc.; Section 377, Deady’s Code.

In 1870 Section 377 of the Code of Civil Procedure was amended: Laws 1870, p. 30. The amendment, as reproduced in Section 390, L. O. L., appears as follows:

*551“Bills of revivor and bills of review, of whatever nature, exceptions for insufficiency, impertinence, or irrelevancy, and cross-bills, except as hereinafter mentioned, are abolished; but a decree in equity may be impeached and set aside, suspended, avoided, or carried into execution by an original suit; and in an action at law, where the defendant is entitled to relief, arising out of facts requiring the interposition of a court of equity, and material to his defense, he may, upon filing his answer therein, also as plaintiff, file a complaint in equity, in the nature of a cross-bill, which shall stay the proceedings at law, and the case thereafter shall proceed as in a suit in equity, in which said proceedings may be perpetually enjoined by final decree, or allowed to proceed in accordance with such final decree. The mode of proceeding in a suit, from the commencement to the determination thereof, and thereafter until satisfaction or performance of the decree be had, shall be as provided in this title, and not otherwise. ’

Neither the printed Laws of 1870 nor even any subsequent compilation of statutes contains a literal exemplification of the amendment, and for that reason we here set down an exact copy of the material parts of the amendment, preserving both the punctuation and wording, as passed by the legislature, and now on file with the Secretary of State:

“ * * Cross-bills, except as hereinafter mentioned, are abolished. * * And in an action at law where the defendant is entitled to relief, arising out of facts requiring the interposition of a court of equity and material to his defense, he may upon filing his answer therein also as plaintiff, file a complaint in equity, in the nature of a cross-bill, which shall stay the proceedings at law and the case thereafter shall proceed as a suit in equity in which said proceeding may be perpetually enjoined by final decree or allowed to proceed in accordance with such final decree. The mode of proceeding in a suit from the commencement to the determination thereof, and thereafter, until satisfac*552tion or performance of the decree be had, shall be as provided in this chapter and not otherwise.”

Heighton declined to file an answer to the cross-bill on the theory that an answer would have operated as a waiver of his right to object to the filing of the cross-bill, and consequently the contention made by him is squarely presented for decision: Scheland v. Erpelding, 6 Or. 259, 263; South Portland, L. Co. v. Munger, 36 Or. 457, 470 (54 Pac. 815, 60 Pac. 5); Wollenberg v. Rose, 41 Or. 314, 316 (68 Pac. 804). In most of the code states the distinction between actions at law and suits in equity has been abolished, and a single form of action, called a civil action, is provided for the enforcement or protection of private rights and the redress of private wrongs; and, as a general rule, in those jurisdictions the defendant is permitted to set forth in a single answer as many defenses and counterclaims as he' may have, whether legal or equitable or both, but they must be separately stated and refer to the causes of action which they are intended to answer in such manner that they may be intelligibly distinguished: Pomeroy, Code Rem. (4 ed.), §§ 4, 473.

1. Oregon, is one of the few states, however, which has not abolished the distinction between suits in equity and actions at law. Here a purely equitable defense cannot be pleaded in an answer to an action at law, but it can be made available by a cross-bill: Ming Yue v. Coos Bay R. R. Co., 24 Or. 392 (33 Pac. 641); Watson v. McLench, 57 Or. 446, 452 (110 Pac. 482, 112 Pac. 416); Lumbermen’s Nat. Bank v. Campbell, 61 Or. 123, 132 (121 Pac. 427); Dose v. Beatie, 62 Or. 308, 316 (123 Pac. 383, 125 Pac. 277); Donart v. Stewart, 63 Or. 76, 79 (126 Pac. 608); Hirsch v. May, 75 Or. 403, 409 (146 Pac. 831); Miller v. Fisher, 77 Or. 532 (151 Pac. 971).

*5532. A cross-bill is not properly filed unless within the limitations fixed by Section 390, L. O. L. The mere fact that a defendant can state a cause of suit entitling him to equitable relief would not of itself be enough to warrant the filing of a cross-bill. The statute contains the words “material to his defense,” and a complaint which does not embrace that element does not come within Section 390, L. O. L.: Hatcher v. Briggs, 6 Or. 32, 40; Haaland v. Miller, 67 Or. 346, 350 (136 Pac. 9). The cross-bill is for the purpose of establishing the equitable defense: Parker v. Daly, 58 Or. 564, 571 (114 Pac. 926, 115 Pac. 723, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 545); Oatman v. Epps, 15 Or. 437, 438 (15 Pac. 709); Haaland v. Miller, 67 Or. 346, 350 (136 Pac. 9), is authority for the statement that “a ‘defense,’ within the meaning of Section 390, L. O. L., includes every matter of fact tending to diminish or entirely defeat the plaintiff’s cause of action,” and “a counterclaim is not a defense within the meaning” of that section. While it is true that a defendant is not restricted to merely defensive matter, and may set forth facts entitling him to affirmative relief, still the relief sought must operate as an entire or partial defense to the action at law: Carroll v. Browne, 55 Or. 316, 321 (106 Pac. 331).

3. Stated in general terms, a defendant may plead anything which shows that the plaintiff ought not to recover. If the thing pleaded is a legal right, it must appear in an answer filed in the action at law, but, if it be an equitable right, it may be availed of by filing a cross-bill, or, as stated in Pomeroy on Code Rem. (4 ed.), Section 30:

“Whenever equity confers a right, and the right avails to defeat a legal cause of action — that is, shows that the plaintiff ought not to recover in his legal action —then the facts from which such right arises may be *554set up as an equitable defense in bar”: 1 Cyc. 738; 1 C. J., p. 1052.

In Dose v. Beatie, 62 Or. 308, 316 (123 Pac. 383, 386), this court ruled that:

“When in a law action the defendant can legally set forth the facts constituting his entire defense, his answer is adequate, and there is no necessity for a resort to a suit in equity in the nature of a cross-bill. ’ ’

If, however, the defense available at law is not as plain, adequate, complete, practical and efficient as a defense on the same facts in a court of equity, a cross-bill may be interposed: South Portland L. Co. v. Munger, 36 Or. 457, 473 (54 Pac. 815, 60 Pac. 5).

We may better appreciate the meaning of the statute when reminded of the purpose of the legislation. This court long ago held that:

“The object of the provisions of the Code regulating the proceeding was to avoid the necessity of waiting until the action at law was determined before equity jurisdiction was invoked; and it saved the necessity of procuring the issuance of an injunction to restrain the execution of the judgment at law”: Scheiffelin v. Weatherred, 19 Or. 172, 174 (23 Pac. 898, 899); South Portland L. Co. v. Munger, 36 Or. 457, 468 (54 Pac. 815, 60 Pac. 5).

The early case of Scheland v. Erpelding, 6 Or. 259, affords a precedent to be followed here. E. commenced an action at law against S. for the recovery of wages alleged to have been due for work performed by E. An answer was filed in the action at law by S., who then filed a cross-bill averring that S. and E. were partners, and that the work done by E. was performed as a partner, and the prayer asked that the action at law be stayed, the partnership dissolved, and the business settled. Although the court held that the fifing *555of an answer waived the objection to the cross-bill, nevertheless it was held:

That “the question of the existence of this partnership, if traversed, could be tried by a jury in the action at law, and was therefore a good defense; and Scheland had no need to avail himself of an equitable defense ; and the motion of the plaintiff in the action at law to strike out this cross-bill should have prevailed,” and, further, that “this cross-bill is a bill to dissolve and settle an alleged partnership, and would have been a proper proceeding as a suit in equity had the issue of partnership in the action at law been found for Scheland, and that part of the claim of Erpelding thereby defeated.”

The conclusion reached in Scheland v. Erpelding, 6 Or. 259, 263, was approved in Fire Assn. v. Allesina, 45 Or. 154, 164 (77 Pac. 123, 127), where Mr. Justice Bean, speaking for the court, said:

“The action was on an account; the defense that the parties were partners, which was a good and complete defense at law. The condition of the partnership account, if they were partners, or whether the partnership should be dissolved, were matters wholly irrelevant to the law action, and in no way material to a defense therein.”

4. Every allegation of fact appearing in the cross-bill in any way material to a defense against the complaint in the action at law can be alleged by Tooze in an answer and proved by him in an action at law. If the facts set forth by Tooze in the cross-bill are true, then Heighton cannot recover in the action at law. Supposing that the action at law is tried, that the jury finds that the contract was made as alleged by Heighton, that Tooze failed to comply with the agreement, and that Heighton obtained a judgment; in that situation no one would contend that Tooze had any equitable right remaining, and yet, if he had an equitable right *556before the trial, he would have that same right after the trial, because the equitable right could not be tried in the action at law.

5. A party is not obliged to file a cross-bill, but, if he chooses, may litigate the action at law to a conclusion, and then commence a suit in equity and defeat the judgment in the action at law by the assertion of his equitable defense: Jakel v. Seeck, ante, p. 489 (154 Pac. 424). All the facts alleged in the cross-bill can be pleaded in an answer to the complaint in the action at law, and, if those facts are true, they will present an insurmountable barrier against the claim of Heighton. It must be conceded that a foreclosure of the contract on account of the breach of Heighton could be obtained only in a court of equity, but it must be remembered that a statement of facts which, if true, would warrant the granting of equitable relief, is not alone sufficient, but something more is necessary: the relief to which the party is entitled must arise out of facts requiring the interposition of a court of equity and material to his defense. We have not overlooked the fact that the conclusion reached here does not harmonize with an expression appearing as dictum and found in Wollenberg v. Rose, 41 Or. 314, 316 (68 Pac. 804); but we are also mindful of the circumstance that there it was expressly held that Eose waived his right to object to the cross-bill by answering and submitting to the jurisdiction of a court of equity.

The decree of the trial court is reversed, and the demurrer to the cross-bill is sustained. Eeversed.

Mr. Chief Justice Moore, Mr. Justice Bean and Mr. Justice Benson concur.