57 P. 614 | Ariz. | 1899
On the fifteenth day of August, 1893, the Hartford Banking Company, a corporation duly organized under the laws of the territory of Arizona, and doing a banking business in the city of Phoenix, executed and delivered to J. E. Walker a deed of assignment of all the property belonging to the bank,—real, personal, and mixed,—in trust for the benefit of the creditors of the company. The boobs of the bank at the time of the assignment showed that appellee, C. H. Gray, was indebted to the bank for overdrafts in the sum of $4,803.89. On the thirteenth day of June, 1895,
The record discloses that at the time of the institution of the above action there was pending in the district court of Maricopa County an action brought by said C. H. Gray and Mary A. Gray, his wife, against the said Hartford Banking Company and said J. E. Walker, assignee of said company. The object of this suit was to obtain an injunction against Walker, as assignee, restraining him from proceeding with the sale of certain premises owned by plaintiffs under a judgment obtained by the Bank of British Columbia against said plaintiffs for the sum of $10,057.82, including interest and costs, and the foreclosure of certain mortgage liiens against said premises, which said judgment had been assigned to said Walker, as the assignee of said Hartford Banking
When these two eases were called for trial, they were, by the consent of parties, tried together; the testimony in the injunction case being first taken, and by stipulation, so far as applicable, was considered as offered in the case of Walker, as assignee, against C. IT. Gray. In the injunction suit the court found that the plaintiffs had failed to establish any equitable ground for enjoining the enforcement of the judgment obtained by the Bank of British Columbia, and assigned to Walker as assignee, upon which judgment there was an unpaid balance of $5,154.51, and dismissed the action.
In the suit of Walker, assignee, against C. H. Gray, the findings of fact made by the court were as follows: “First. That on the 15th day of August, 1893, the Hartford Banking Company executed and delivered to the plaintiff a deed of assignment, in trust and for the benefit of all its creditors, of all the property belonging to said banking corporation, and that plaintiff is the duly qualified and acting trustee of said corporation. Second. That in divers sums and at divers times between the 1st day of January, 1889, and the 1st day of July, 1893, the said defendant, C. H. Gray, deposited with the Hartford Banking Company, to be placed to the credit of said defendant, and to be drawn out on checks of said defendant when he should so elect, the total sum of $51,851.36, and with said sum so deposited by defendant with the said Hartford Banking Company, was included the sum of $31,500 so deposited by the defendant with the Hartford Banking Company on the 12th day of November, 1890, and of which said sum $22,000 only was placed to the credit of said defendant by the said Hartford Banking Company, and
The appellant, Walker, filed his motion for a new trial, in which he set up that at the trial of the action he was taken by surprise, in that, from the answer and counterclaim filed, he was led to expect that Gray’s defense would be limited to-
Six assignments of error were made by counsel for appellant in their brief. The first two were based upon the reception of evidence on the part of appellee, Gray, and the rulings of the court thereon,—particularly upon the admission of the testimony of Gray relating to the check for thirty-one thousand five hundred dollars, and the misappropriation by the cashier of the bank of nine thousand five hundred dollars, part of the proceeds of the check. It is contended that neither the answer nor the counterclaim filed in this action supports this evidence. This testimony was put in in the injunction case, in which the transactions between Gray and the bank were fully gone into. When the testimony was introduced, the objection was made by counsel for appellant that it was “immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent.” The question that no issue was made by the pleadings which rendered the testimony of Gray as to the misappropriation of the nine thousand five hundred dollars admissible was not raised. Again, as we have seen, at the close of the testimony put in in the injunction case, counsel for appellant stipulated in open court that said testimony, in so far as applicable, should be considered by the court, and taken as the proof in this case. The record does not show that the court, in ruling upon the objections made to the introduction of evidence in the injunction case, did so with reference to the state of the pleadings in this case. Appellant, therefore, in order to save an exception to the admission of testimony given in the former case relating to the subject-matter of this action on the ground of insufficient allegations in appellee’s answer and cross-complaint, should have, as a part of his stipulation, raised the point, and not waited until after the court’s decision. Had the cross-complaint been so radically defective as not to support a judgment thereon, no objection or exception thereto was necessary in order to save the point. An inspection, however, of the counterclaim, will show that it is sufficient in this respect, no matter how great the variance between the allegations of such counterclaim and the proof may' have been, as it clearly stated a cause of action. We hold, therefore, that appellant waived his objection by his stipulation and failure to raise the point at any time during the trial.
The fifth and sixth assignments of error have reference to the action of the court in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial upon the ground of surprise and newly-discovered evidence. Appellant contends that the trial court erred in not granting him a new trial for the reason that he was taken by surprise by the testimony of Gray relative to the misappropriation by the cashier, Hiller, of the nine thousand five hundred dollars, because there was nothing in the answer or counterclaim of appellee, Gray, to indicate that any such defense would be made, and for the reason that the affidavits of A. G. Hubbard, of the firm of Hubbard & Bowers, who drew the cheek for thirty-one thousand five hundred dollars,
Doan, J., and Davis, J., concur.